MAIA, Rafael Trindade.; SCARPASSA, Vera Margarete.; MACIEL, Louise Haddad.; TADEI, Wanderli Pedro.
Resumo:
ABSTRACT. Aedes albopictus, a mosquito originally from Southeast
Asia, is considered to be one of the main vectors of dengue fever, yel-
low fever and other arboviruses. We examined the genetic variability
and population structure of 68 individuals of Ae. albopictus collected
from ive neighborhoods of the city of Manaus, based on the mitochon-
drial gene coding for NADH dehydrogenase subunit 5 (ND5). Two hap-
lotypes were found, separated by a single mutational event (T ↔ C),
with extremely low levels of genetic variability (h = 0.187 ± 0.059; π =
0.00044 ± 0.00014). Based on AMOVA, we concluded that most of the
variation (99.08%) occurred within populations, though the levels of
variation were not signiicant. Neutrality tests (Tajima’s D and Fu’s Fs)
were non-signiicant, indicating that these populations are in genetic
equilibrium. The most frequent haplotype (H1) is restricted to Brazilian
populations of Ae. albopictus, while the rarer haplotype (H2) is shared
with populations from the United States and Asia. We suggest that the
reduced variability and low genetic structure identiied in our study is a consequence of the recent introduction of this species in Manaus, pos-
sibly through a founder effect, followed by expansion throughout the
city neighborhoods. Genetic similarity would therefore be due to insuf-
icient time to have accumulated genetic differences between the popu-
lations of Ae. albopictus and not to extensive gene low among them.