2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.meegid.2014.01.012
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Congopain genes diverged to become specific to Savannah, Forest and Kilifi subgroups of Trypanosoma congolense, and are valuable for diagnosis, genotyping and phylogenetic inferences

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Cited by 18 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…We are not sure which "previous authors" Tibayrenc and Ayala are referring to (see also concerns raised by Ramirez and Llewellyn (2015) and Rougeron, De Meeûs, and Banuls (2015) on the practice of self-and mis-citation by Tibayrenc and Ayala). Perhaps the authors were referring to the work of Simo et al (2013) or Rodrigues et al (2014), but these studies found evidence of clonality in Forest T. congolense while the Savannah subgroup was the main subject in our study (see also section 1). Importantly, note that the results of Rodriguez and colleagues suggested that recombination may be an important process in generating a diverse repertoire of the congopain genes in the Savannah subgroup (Rodrigues et al, 2014).…”
Section: Infrequent-recombinationmentioning
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…We are not sure which "previous authors" Tibayrenc and Ayala are referring to (see also concerns raised by Ramirez and Llewellyn (2015) and Rougeron, De Meeûs, and Banuls (2015) on the practice of self-and mis-citation by Tibayrenc and Ayala). Perhaps the authors were referring to the work of Simo et al (2013) or Rodrigues et al (2014), but these studies found evidence of clonality in Forest T. congolense while the Savannah subgroup was the main subject in our study (see also section 1). Importantly, note that the results of Rodriguez and colleagues suggested that recombination may be an important process in generating a diverse repertoire of the congopain genes in the Savannah subgroup (Rodrigues et al, 2014).…”
Section: Infrequent-recombinationmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…There is currently no evidence from the field for genetic exchange between any of the T. congolense subgroups, suggesting that the subgroups represent clades (not near‐clades). Indeed, earlier observations based on congopain gene diversity showed that the genetic distances between the T. congolense subgroups (Forest, Savannah and Kilifi) are larger than the divergence between T. simiae and T. godfreyi , suggesting that the T. congolense subgroups may represent different species (Rodrigues et al., ). Hence, the significant divergence between T. congolense Forest and Savannah supports the biological species concept (see also in Gibson, ), namely a species concept based on restricted gene flow, in which genes are exchanged by recombination within but not between species.…”
Section: Genetic Subdivision Does Not Imply Clonal Evolutionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Novel trypanosomes from tsetse flies [7, 25, 26, 29, 30, 4446] and African ungulates [2, 23, 24, 34] were reported in eastern and central-southern African wildlife conservation areas.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The alignment was manually adjusted, and network split decomposition was inferred using the Neighbor-Net method with Kimura 2 parameters implemented as previously described [33, 34]. Internode support was estimated with 100 bootstrap replicates, using the parameters optimised for network inferences.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Os tripanossomas do subgênero Nannomonas desenvolvem-se no intestino médio e na probóscide das moscas tsé-tsé, gerando patogenias severas em suínos domésticos (Adams et al, 2010;Rodrigues et al, 2014).…”
Section: O Clado T Brucei Compreende Os Tripanossomas Africanos Dos unclassified