Data from: The polyphyly of Plasmodium: comprehensive phylogenetic analyses of the malaria parasites (order Haemosporida) reveal widespread taxonomic conflict
The evolutionary relationships among the apicomplexan blood pathogens known as the malaria parasites (order Haemosporida), some of which infect nearly 200 million humans each year, has remained a vexing phylogenetic problem due to limitations in taxon sampling, character sampling, and the extreme nu...
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Zusammenfassung: | The evolutionary relationships among the apicomplexan blood pathogens
known as the malaria parasites (order Haemosporida), some of which infect
nearly 200 million humans each year, has remained a vexing phylogenetic
problem due to limitations in taxon sampling, character sampling, and the
extreme nucleotide base composition biases that are characteristic of this
clade. Previous phylogenetic work on the malaria parasites has often
lacked sufficient representation of the broad taxonomic diversity within
the Haemosporida or the multi-locus sequence data needed to resolve deep
evolutionary relationships, rendering our understanding of haemosporidian
life history evolution and the origin of the human malaria parasites
incomplete. Here we present the most comprehensive phylogenetic analysis
of the malaria parasites conducted to date, using samples from a broad
diversity of vertebrate hosts that includes numerous enigmatic and poorly
known haemosporidian lineages in addition to genome-wide multi-locus
sequence data. We find that if base composition differences were corrected
for during phylogenetic analysis, we recovered a well-supported topology
indicating that the evolutionary history of the malaria parasites was
characterized by a complex series of transitions in life history
strategies and host usage. Notably we find that Plasmodium, the malaria
parasite genus that includes the species of human medical concern, is
polyphyletic with the life history traits characteristic of this genus
having evolved in a dynamic manner across the phylogeny. We find support
for multiple instances of gain and loss of asexual proliferation in host
blood cells and production of hemozoin pigment, two traits that have been
used for taxonomic classification as well as considered to be important
factors for parasite virulence and used as drug targets. Lastly, our
analysis illustrates the need for a widespread reassessment of malaria
parasite taxonomy. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.kk628dt |