Author:
BLAXTER MARK,KOUTSOVOULOS GEORGIOS
Abstract
SUMMARYNematodes are abundant and diverse, and include many parasitic species. Molecular
phylogenetic analyses have shown that parasitism of plants and animals has
arisen at least 15 times independently. Extant nematode species also display
lifestyles that are proposed to be on the evolutionary trajectory to parasitism.
Recent advances have permitted the determination of the genomes and
transcriptomes of many nematode species. These new data can be used to further
resolve the phylogeny of Nematoda, and identify possible genetic patterns
associated with parasitism. Plant-parasitic nematode genomes show evidence of
horizontal gene transfer from other members of the rhizosphere, and these genes
play important roles in the parasite-host interface. Similar horizontal transfer
is not evident in animal parasitic groups. Many nematodes have bacterial
symbionts that can be essential for survival. Horizontal transfer from symbionts
to the nematode is also common, but its biological importance is unclear. Over
100 nematode species are currently targeted for sequencing, and these data will
yield important insights into the biology and evolutionary history of
parasitism. It is important that these new technologies are also applied to
free-living taxa, so that the pre-parasitic ground state can be inferred, and
the novelties associated with parasitism isolated.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
216 articles.
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