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1.
Izv Akad Nauk Ser Biol ; (6): 645-53, 2009.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20146413

ABSTRACT

The saltation origin of the causative agent of the plague Yersinia pestis from the pseudotuberculosis microbe Y. pseudotuberculosis O:1b has been proclaimed in recent investigations on molecular genetics. The speciation process in this case is proposed to be connected with horizontal inclusion of exogenous genetic structures (such as specific plasmids pFra and pPst) into the genome of the ancestral form. The alternative "Darwinian" model of the gradual origin of the plague agent is proposed based on ecological factors. The comparison of two evolutionary scenarios, saltation and gradual, is performed; the latter seems more likely.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Gene Transfer, Horizontal/genetics , Genome, Bacterial/physiology , Plasmids/genetics , Yersinia pestis/genetics , Humans , Plague/genetics , Yersinia pseudotuberculosis/genetics
2.
Izv Akad Nauk Ser Biol ; (4): 389-95, 2008.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18773526

ABSTRACT

The ratio of macro- and microevolutionary processes is considered with reference to the ecological scenario of the origin of the plague pathogen and its subsequent natural and anthropogenic global expansion. The macroevolutionary transformation of the ancestral pseudotuberculosis microbe clone into the initial plague microbe Yersinia pestis tarbagani occurred in Central Asia at the end of the Late Pleistocene by a "vertical" Darwinian way in an inadaptive heterothermal continual intermediate environment--the Mongolian marmot Marmota sibirica-flea Oropsylla silantiewi system--via a sequence of unstable and currently extinct intermediate forms. Its natural geographic expansion on the "oil spot" principle in the postglacial time led to the microevolutionary formation of 20-30 hostal subspecies circulating in populations of the background species of burrowing rodents and pikas in arid areas of Eurasia. The intercontinental spread of the "marmot" and "rat" pathogen subspecies in the past few centuries has been exclusively anthropogenic, with the involvement of synanthropic (ship) rats.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Phylogeny , Plague/epidemiology , Siphonaptera/microbiology , Yersinia pestis/physiology , Animals , Insect Vectors/microbiology , Parasites/microbiology , Plague/etiology , Rats
3.
J Med Entomol ; 38(2): 210-3, 2001 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11296824

ABSTRACT

We report on fleas collected from small mammals in two forests, a lowland semideciduous dipterocarp forest and a highland evergreen forest, in southern Viet Nam. In the lowland forest, only one species of flea (Xenopsylla vexabilis Jordan) infested a single species of rodent [Berylmys berdmorei (Blyth)]. In the highland forest, seven species of fleas were collected from eight species of small mammals. Three species of fleas, Lentistivalius insolli (Traub), Lentistivalius occidentayunnanus Li, Xie & Gong, and Gryphopsylla jacobsoni (Jordan & Rothschild), collected from mammals in the highland forest represent new records for Viet Nam.


Subject(s)
Ectoparasitic Infestations/veterinary , Rodent Diseases/parasitology , Siphonaptera , Animals , Ectoparasitic Infestations/parasitology , Mammals , Siphonaptera/classification , Vietnam
5.
Izv Akad Nauk Ser Biol ; (6): 645-57, 2000.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11147494

ABSTRACT

A new hypothesis of the origin of the plague microbe in the Mongolian bobak (Marmota sibirica Radde, 1862) populations in Central Asia during the Pleistocene is based on the ideas of its relative phylogenetic recency. The Late Pleistocene cooling, which induced a deep freezing of the grounds in southern Siberia, Mongolia, and Manchuria, is considered as an inducer of speciation. The main ecological factors of the plague microbe evolution include the species specific behavior of the Mongolian bobak during preparation to hibernation related to its occurrence in arid petrophytic landscapes and the larval parasitism of the flea Oropsylla silantiewi Wagn., 1898 in winter. Genesis of the plague foci is divided into two periods: natural-historical and biosocial. During the first period, the primari natural foci in Eurasia were formed and, during the second period, synanthropic (rat) and secondary natural foci appeared, with the participation of humans, in Africa, The New World, and on some tropical islands.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Disease Reservoirs , Ecosystem , Plague/parasitology , Yersinia pestis/physiology , Adaptation, Physiological , Animals , Climate , Geography , Host-Parasite Interactions , Humans , Insect Vectors , Rodentia/parasitology , Siphonaptera/parasitology
6.
Bull World Health Organ ; 75(2): 117-23, 1997.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9185363

ABSTRACT

Reported are the results of studies over the period 1989-94 on host-flea complexes in small mammals and their flea ectoparasites in and around a number of human settlements in Viet Nam in which human cases of plague had been found. Collections were also made in savanna and tropical forest areas within a 10-km radius of the settlements. The greatest numbers of small mammals, for the most part Rattus spp., and of the flea ectoparasite Xenopsylla cheopis were found in inhabited areas. X. cheopis was not found on any feral or sylvan mammal further than 0.6 km from settlements. A possible link between wild and commensal mammals may be provided by the flea Lentistivalius klossi, a specific parasite of squirrels and tree-shrews but also found in very small numbers on commensal rats. No zoonotic foci of plague were found in the immediate vicinity of the villages studied and it is most likely that plague persists in a commensal rat-X. cheopis cycle in and around human settlements in Viet Nam.


Subject(s)
Disease Reservoirs , Insect Vectors , Plague/epidemiology , Siphonaptera , Animals , Ecology , Humans , Mice , Rats , Rodent Diseases/epidemiology , Vietnam/epidemiology
8.
Parazitologiia ; 26(6): 516-20, 1992.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1299806

ABSTRACT

The fleas of wild and commensal small mammals, domestic animals (dogs, cats) and free-living flea forms in houses have been collected in plague nidi of Tay Nguyen plate, Dak-Lak province, Vietnam. Pulex irritans, Ctenocephalides felis felis, Ct. felis orientis were found in the houses on dogs, cats and on the ground floor. Commensal rats in populated areas were infested by Xenopsylla cheopis and rarely by Lentistivalius klossi. The agricultural zone was inhabited by both home and wild animals such as commensal, savannah and forest-dwelling small mammals. The flea fauna of this zone is presented by X. cheopis and L. klossi. In the tropical forest surrounding villages four of the flea species were found: X. vexabilis, a specific parasite of the forest-dwelling rat Berylmys berdmorei, L. klossi found on six species of forest small mammals, Acropsylla girshami from Berylmys bowersii and Pariodontis subjugis from Hystrix brachyura. The agricultural zone is the most possible place of commensal and forest-dwelling small mammals contact, where the latter can get plague microbe.


Subject(s)
Disease Reservoirs , Insect Vectors , Plague/transmission , Siphonaptera , Animals , Animals, Domestic/parasitology , Animals, Wild/parasitology , Disease Reservoirs/veterinary , Disease Vectors , Ecology , Humans , Plague/parasitology , Plague/veterinary , Seasons , Vietnam
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