Published November 13, 2018 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Gene exchange between two divergent species of the fungal human pathogen, Coccidioides

  • 1. University of North Carolina
  • 2. University of Brasília
  • 3. Northern Arizona University

Description

The fungal genus Coccidioides is composed of two species, Coccidioides immitis and C. posadasii. These two species are the causal agents of coccidioidomycosis, a pulmonary disease also known as valley fever. The two species are thought to have shared genetic material due to gene exchange in spite of their long divergence. To quantify the magnitude of shared ancestry between them, we analyzed the genomes of a population sample from each species. Next, we inferred what is the expected size of shared haplotypes that might be inherited from the last common ancestor of the two species and find a cutoff to find what haplotypes have conclusively been exchanged between species. Finally, we precisely identified the breakpoints of the haplotypes that have crossed the species boundary and measure the allele frequency of each introgression in this sample. We find that introgressions are not uniformly distributed across the genome. Most, but not all, of the introgressions segregate at low frequency. Our results show that divergent species can share alleles, that species boundaries can be porous, and highlight the need for a systematic exploration of gene exchange in fungal species.

Notes

Files

Cocci-for-dryad.zip

Files (1.3 GB)

Name Size Download all
md5:de5077f136ff46e955dba6a7877a54d6
1.3 GB Preview Download
md5:8b41be0b570cb9585499bea243590413
202.9 kB Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1111/evo.13643 (DOI)