Data from: 2b-RAD genotyping for population genomic studies of Chagas disease vectors: Rhodnius ecuadoriensis in Ecuador
Background: Rhodnius ecuadoriensis is the main triatomine vector of Chagas disease, American trypanosomiasis, in Southern Ecuador and Northern Peru. Genomic approaches and next generation sequencing technologies have become powerful tools for investigating population diversity and structure which is...
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: Rhodnius ecuadoriensis is the main triatomine vector of Chagas
disease, American trypanosomiasis, in Southern Ecuador and Northern Peru.
Genomic approaches and next generation sequencing technologies have become
powerful tools for investigating population diversity and structure which
is a key consideration for vector control. Here we assess the
effectiveness of three different 2b restriction site-associated DNA
(2b-RAD) genotyping strategies in R. ecuadoriensis to provide sufficient
genomic resolution to tease apart microevolutionary processes and
undertake some pilot population genomic analyses. Methodology/Principal
findings: The 2b-RAD protocol was carried out in-house at a
non-specialized laboratory using 20 R. ecuadoriensis adults collected from
the central coast and southern Andean region of Ecuador, from June 2006 to
July 2013. 2b-RAD sequencing data was performed on an Illumina MiSeq
instrument and analyzed with the STACKS de novo pipeline for loci assembly
and Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) discovery. Preliminary population
genomic analyses (global AMOVA and Bayesian clustering) were implemented.
Our results showed that the 2b-RAD genotyping protocol is effective for R.
ecuadoriensis and likely for other triatomine species. However, only BcgI
and CspCI restriction enzymes provided a number of markers suitable for
population genomic analysis at the read depth we generated. Our
preliminary genomic analyses detected a signal of genetic structuring
across the study area. Conclusions/Significance: Our findings suggest that
2b-RAD genotyping is both a cost effective and methodologically simple
approach for generating high resolution genomic data for Chagas disease
vectors with the power to distinguish between different vector populations
at epidemiologically relevant scales. As such, 2b-RAD represents a
powerful tool in the hands of medical entomologists with limited access to
specialized molecular biological equipment. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.02bf1 |