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Vol. 10, Issue 10, 1587-1593, October 2000
LETTER
A Genetic Linkage Map of the Apicomplexan Protozoan Parasite Eimeria tenella
Martin W.
Shirley,1 and
Dora A.
Harvey
Institute for Animal Health, Compton Laboratory, Compton, Near
Newbury, Berkshire, RG20 7NN UK
Apicomplexan protozoan parasites have complex life cycles that
involve phases of asexual and sexual reproduction. Some genera have
intermediate insect hosts, for example, Plasmodium spp. (the cause of malaria), but related genera such as Eimeria spp.
(causative agents of coccidiosis in poultry) have a direct life cycle
occurring in only a single host. Mechanisms that regulate the life
cycles of apicomplexan parasites are unknown, but the intracellular
growth of avian Eimeria spp. is easily shortened by serial
selection for the first parasites to complete the transition from
asexual to sexual reproduction (to yield so-called precocious lines). To investigate the genetic basis of such an abbreviated life cycle, we
have used the species E. tenella and analyzed the inheritance of 443 polymorphic DNA markers in 22 recombinant cloned progeny derived
from a cross between parents that had selectable phenotypes of
precocious development or resistance to an anticoccidial drug. The
markers were placed in 16 linkage groups (which defined 12 chromosomes)
and a further 57 unlinked groups. Two linkage groups showed an
association (P = .0105) with the traits of precocious development or drug-resistance and were mapped to chromosome 2 (ca 1.2 Mbp) and chromosome 1 (ca 1.0 Mbp), respectively. The map provides a
framework for further studies on the identification of genetic loci
implicated in the regulation of the life cycle of an important
protozoan parasite and a representative of a major taxonomic group.
[A table with the segregation data is available as an
online supplement at http://www.genome.org.]
1
Corresponding author.
10:1587-1593 ©2000 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISSN 1088-9051/00 $5.00

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