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Unravelling the evolution of the head lice and body lice of humans |
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Author: Leo, N. P.; Barker, S. C.
Year: 2005
Title: Unravelling the evolution of the head lice and
body lice of humans
Journal: Parasitology Research
Volume: 98
Pages: 44-47
Date: Dec
Abstract: Recent studies of mitochondrial genes of
the head and body lice of humans indicate that present-day lice comprise two
lineages that diverged before the evolution of modern humans. To test if this
was a locus-specific phenomenon, we studied two nuclear genes, elongation
factor-1 alpha (EF-1 alpha) and small subunit ribosomal RNA (ssu rRNA). Our ssu
rRNA phylogeny was concordant with the phylogenies from mitochondrial genes,
but the EF-1 alpha phylogeny was not concordant either with the mitochondrial
phylogenies or with the ssu rRNA phylogeny. So both nuclear (ssu rRNA) and
mitochondrial data indicate that there are two lineages of lice: one lineage
with head lice only (H-only lineage) the other lineage with head and body lice
(H+B lineage). Thus, body lice apparently evolved from just one of the two main
lineages of lice. However, the date of divergence and geographical origins of
the two lineages are controversial. Kittler et al. (Curr Biol 13:1414-1417,
2003; Curr Biol 14:2309, 2004) proposed that these two lineages diverged 0.77
mya, whereas Reed et al. (PLoS Biol 2:e340, 2004) proposed that they diverged
1.18 mya and suggested that one of the lineages, the H-only lineage, evolved in
the New World on Homo erectus. We discuss this hypothesis in light of our
results from ssu rRNA.
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