Author:
ANDERSON T. J. C.,PAUL R. E. L.,DONNELLY C. A.,DAY K. P.
Abstract
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based genotyping of oocysts dissected from mosquito midguts
has previously been used to investigate overall levels of inbreeding within malaria parasite
populations. We present a re-analysis of the population structure of Plasmodium falciparum
malaria using diploid genotypes at three antigen-encoding loci in 118 oocysts dissected from 34
mosquitoes. We use these data to ask whether mating is occurring at random within the mosquito
midgut, as is generally assumed. We observe a highly significant deficit of heterozygous oocysts
within mosquitoes at all three loci, suggesting that fusion of gametes occurs non-randomly in the
mosquito gut. A variety of biological explanations, such as interrupted feeding of mosquitoes,
positive assortative mating and outcrossing depression, could account for this observation.
However, an alternative artefactual explanation – the presence of non-amplifying or null alleles –
can account for the observed data equally well, without the need to invoke non-random mating.
To evaluate this explanation further, we estimate the frequencies of null alleles within the oocyst
population using maximum likelihood, by making the assumption that non-amplifying oocysts at
any of the three loci are homozygous for null alleles. Observed levels of visible heterozygotes fit
closely with those expected under random mating when non-amplifying oocysts are accounted for.
Other lines of evidence also support the artefactual explanation. Overall inbreeding coefficients
have been recalculated in the light of this analysis, and may be considerably lower than those
estimated previously. In conclusion, we suggest that the deficit of heterozygotes observed is
unlikely to indicate non-random mating within the mosquito gut and is better explained by
misscoring of heterozygotes as homozygotes.
Subject
Genetics,General Medicine
Cited by
29 articles.
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