Spatio-temporal Genetic Structuring of Leishmania major in Tunisia by Microsatellite Analysis

In Tunisia, cases of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania major are increasing and spreading from the south-west to new areas in the center. To improve the current knowledge on L. major evolution and population dynamics, we performed multi-locus microsatellite typing of human isolates from Tunisian governorates where the disease is endemic (Gafsa, Kairouan and Sidi Bouzid governorates) and collected during two periods: 1991–1992 and 2008–2012. Analysis (F-statistics and Bayesian model-based approach) of the genotyping results of isolates collected in Sidi Bouzid in 1991–1992 and 2008–2012 shows that, over two decades, in the same area, Leishmania parasites evolved by generating genetically differentiated populations. The genetic patterns of 2008–2012 isolates from the three governorates indicate that L. major populations did not spread gradually from the south to the center of Tunisia, according to a geographical gradient, suggesting that human activities might be the source of the disease expansion. The genotype analysis also suggests previous (Bayesian model-based approach) and current (F-statistics) flows of genotypes between governorates and districts. Human activities as well as reservoir dynamics and the effects of environmental changes could explain how the disease progresses. This study provides new insights into the evolution and spread of L. major in Tunisia that might improve our understanding of the parasite flow between geographically and temporally distinct populations.


Introduction
In Tunisia, zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis (ZCL), also known as "Le Bouton de Gafsa" (the pimple of Gafsa), was first described in 1884 by Déperet and Boinet in the Gafsa governorate (south-west of Tunisia) [1]. ZCL represents a typical model of emerging and reemerging zoonosis [2]. ZCL can cause substantial morbidity because of the presence of chronic skin ulcers and the psychological effect of disfigurement [3]. No vaccine is available yet and the current treatments (mainly intra-lesion injections) are expensive and not easy to administer, particularly to children and patients with multiple lesions. For this reason, an international research partnership was launched in 1995 to focus on clinical trials of topical preparations, mainly paromomycin ointments, as new treatments of ZCL caused by Leishmania major [4,5,6]. Moreover, epidemiological studies have attempted to determine the spatial and temporal dynamics of ZCL epidemics to improve the prediction of their occurrence and consequently their control [7,8]. ZCL has been endemo-epidemic in the Gafsa region for many years, and in 1982 an epidemic was recorded in the Kairouan governorate for the first time [9]. Then, the disease spread to Sidi Bouzid, where it emerged as an epidemic in 1991 (see map of Tunisia in Fig 1 to localize these regions) [10,11]. Since then, the disease is maintained in these areas and has expanded also to other governorates in the center and south of Tunisia [12].
L. major is transmitted by the sand fly vector Phlebotomus papatasi [13] and rodents are the reservoir, including Psammomys obesus (fat sand rat) and Meriones shawi (Shaw's jird) [14,15]. The majority of L. major strains isolated in Tunisia belong to the MON-25 zymodeme [11,16,17]. It is largely recognized that the population structure of pathogens is influenced by different evolutionary factors, particularly during invasion of new ecosystems [18]. However, it is not known how their geographical distribution and temporal emergence affected the genetic structure and evolution of Tunisian L. major populations, mainly because multi-locus enzyme electrophoresis (MLEE), which has been widely used for phylogenetic typing of parasites, is not discriminative enough. On the other hand, microsatellite markers in combination with recent statistical methods represent a powerful tool for studying the population structure and monitoring the dynamics of these pathogens in time and space because of their high discriminating power and their presumed neutrality [19,20]. Nevertheless, no detailed study has been carried out on the population structure of L. major in Tunisia with these powerful markers.
Therefore, the aim of this study was to analyze the spatio-temporal organization of L. major in the three main endemic areas of ZCL in Tunisia (Gafsa, Kairouan and Sidi Bouzid governorates) by using a multi-locus microsatellite typing approach and population genetic statistical methods. Human isolates collected in the three governorates between 2008 and 2012 were used to assess the population dynamics of L. major according to the geographical distribution and the chronological emergence of leishmaniasis epidemics in human populations. Moreover, human isolates collected in Sidi Bouzid governorate in the 1991-1992 and 2008-2012 periods were compared to provide information on the evolution of L. major populations in the same area over twenty years.

Ethics statement
Research included in this study was subject to ethical review by the International Review Board of the Pasteur Institute of Tunis and approved as part of a research project submitted in response to a "call" from the National Institutes of Health for funding Tropical Medicine Research Centers. The Pasteur Institute of Tunis, the study sponsor, took out an insurance policy in accordance with the Tunisian law concerning clinical research. All clinical or biological investigations were performed in the Health Centers of each governorate to guarantee the patients' safety, confidentiality and respect. All human samples of Leishmania were isolated from patients after collection of the written informed consent at the time of the clinical examination. Human isolates were anonymized and the associated information coded for privacypreserving data mining.
Geographical origin and collection time of the biological samples A total of 172 parasite samples, taken from the swollen edge of cutaneous lesions, were collected from patients in different governorates of Tunisia. Isolates from Sidi Bouzid governorate were collected during the 1991-1992 (historical isolates) and the 2008-2012 (recent isolates) periods, whereas isolates from Gafsa and Kairouan were only from the 2008-2012 period (recent isolates) ( Table 1). Isolates were stored in the cryobank of the Department of Medical Epidemiology, Pasteur Institute of Tunis. Samples were isolated and typed in the framework of different research projects related to ZCL in Tunisia. Isolates were identified as L. major by sequence analysis of the gene encoding RNA polymerase II [21] in combination with the MLEE technique [22] at the Centre National de Référence des Leishmanioses (CNRL) of Montpellier, France.

DNA extraction and microsatellite genotyping
For all samples, total genomic DNA was extracted from parasite mass cultures (promastigotes) using DNA extraction kit, according to the manufacturer's protocol. DNA quality was checked by agarose gel electrophoresis and the concentration measured with a NanoDrop spectrophotometer. Amplification was carried out using fluorescent-labeled primers for ten polymorphic microsatellite markers and the PCR conditions previously described for L. major [20]. 1μl of PCR product was added to a standard loading mix with 0.5μl of internal lane size standard, and 13.5μl of formamide. Genotyping was performed by capillary electrophoresis using an

Microsatellite data analysis
The FSTAT Version 2.9.3.2 software [23] updated from [24] was used to compute estimates and to test the significance of the various population genetic parameters. Genetic polymorphism was measured based on the allelic richness (A) and the Nei's unbiased estimate of genetic diversity within subsamples (Hs) [25]. The observed heterozygosity (Ho) and expected heterozygosity (He) were also calculated. The Wright's F statistics [26] were estimated with the Weir and Cockerham's method [27]: F IS measures the relative inbreeding of individuals due to the local non-random union of gametes in each subpopulation, and F ST measures the relative inbreeding in subpopulations attributable to the subdivision of the total population into subpopulations of limited size. Therefore, F ST also measures the genetic differentiation between subpopulations. The significant departure from 0 of these parameters was tested by 10,000 randomization procedures with FSTAT. The genetic differentiation between historical and recent populations, between governorates (Gafsa, Kairouan and Sidi Bouzid) and between the two sub-populations (historical and recent focus) in the Kairouan governorate was explored. The significance of these estimates was confirmed by p-values 0.05. The gene flow or migration rate between populations was also estimated using FSTAT, as Nm = 1-F ST /4 F ST [28]. A neighbor-joining tree [29], based on the Cavalli-Sforza and Edward's chord distances [30], was used to cluster the genotypes. Data were computed using the POPULATION software to build the distance matrix (version 1.2.28; CNRS, UPR9034, Langella, O.) and the tree was generated Finally, data were analyzed using a Bayesian model-based approach implemented in STRUCTURE, version 2.3.4 [32], to explore the structure of the L. major populations. STRUC-TURE uses Bayesian Monte-Carlo Markov Chain (MCMC) sampling to identify the optimal number of clusters K for a given multi-locus dataset, without requiring the identification of the population subunits a priori. The parameters used were the admixture model with the length of burn-in period of 200,000 iterations, followed by 200,000 MCMC repeats after burn-in. Based on the multi-locus genotype data, isolates were divided into K subpopulations with K ranging from 1 to 10 and ten independent runs were performed for each value of K. The K optimal value (i.e., the optimal number of clusters in the dataset) was calculated using STRUC-TURE HARVESTER, web version [33]. Two approaches were used to choose K. First, ΔK, which measures the second-order rate of change in the log likelihood of the data between successive values of K, was estimated [34]. Second, posterior probabilities for the values of K with the highest Ln P(X|K) were compared. STRUCTURE 2.3.4 was also used to identify migrants. In this case, prior population information was used in the USEPOPINFO option of STRUC-TURE. Populations defined according to geographic and temporal criteria (GF2008-2012, KR2008-2012 and SBZ2008-2012, SBZ1991-1992, MN2008-2012 and CH2008-2012) were used as prior population information for this test. Run conditions for this analysis were as mentioned above. As no information was available about migration, a range of migration rates was assigned (MIGPRIOR = 0.01, 0.05, 0.1), as a sensitivity test during the analysis.

Analysis of L. major population structure in the different governorates
The data obtained from the ten polymorphic microsatellite markers [20] were used to assess and compare the genetic variability of isolates collected from patients in the three Tunisian governorates between 2008 and 2012. The Gafsa isolates (GF2008-2012; n = 66) included 48 genotypes (genotypic diversity = 0.73), the Kairouan isolates (KR2008-2012; n = 46) 35 genotypes (genotypic diversity = 0.76) and the Sidi Bouzid isolates (SBZ2008-2012; n = 25) 24 different genotypes (genotypic diversity = 0.96). This finding shows the high L. major genotypic diversity in these three areas where ZCL is endemic. Unique genotypes and original microsatellite profiles were identified in 18 GF2008-2012 isolates, in four SBZ2008-2012 isolates and in 11 KR2008-2012 samples (S1 Table). Comparisons of the genetic diversity data for the three geographic groups revealed that intraspecific genetic diversity (H s ) was highest in the Gafsa and lowest in the Sidi Bouzid isolates (Table 2). Similarly, the allelic richness (A) and the mean observed heterozygosity (H o ) decreased progressively from Gafsa to Sidi Bouzid ( Table 2).
The mean expected heterozygosity (H e ) values were much higher than the H o values in all three populations (Table 2). These results were confirmed by the inbreeding coefficient (F IS ) values estimated for each locus and in each population, revealing a deficit in heterozygosity in all three populations ( Table 2). The F ST values, which are used as a measure of genetic differentiation between populations, were very low, but significantly different between the GF2008-2012 and SBZ2008-2012 isolates and between the GF2008-2012 and KR2008-2012 isolates. Conversely, the F ST values were not significantly different between the KR2008-2012 and SBZ2008-2012 populations (Table 3). Accordingly, the highest migration rate (Nm) value was between the KR2008-2012 and SBZ2008-2012 populations, whereas the Nm values were much   lower between the GF2008-2012 and KR2008-2012 and between the GF2008-2012 and SBZ2008-2012 populations ( Table 3). The Bayesian model-based clustering analysis implemented in STRUCTURE indicated that our dataset (GF2008-2012, KR2008-2012 and SBZ2008-2012 isolates) could be organized in four (maximum L(K)) or two (maximum ΔK) clusters (K) (Fig 2A and 2B). For K = 2, 92% of L. major isolates from Gafsa, 10% from Kairouan and 38% from Sidi Bouzid were included in one of the inferred clusters and the remaining samples in the second one (Fig 2C.1). Based on the Q-matrix bar plots obtained for each isolate by calculating the posterior probabilities of belonging to each K cluster, the SBZ2008-2012 population showed a mixed membership to the inferred clusters (Fig 2C.1). For K = 4, the Q-matrix bar plots showed an increased separation of the L. major sample substructure. Although the most likely number of groups here suggested a total of four populations no strains were fully assigned to the fourth putative group (yellow group) (Fig 2C.2), suggesting that this was not a valid population for this set [34,35]. This "phantom" population suggesting a wider and deeper clinical sample collection may discover new diversity even in this small geographic area [36]. Based on the bar plots for the two assumptions, K = 2 seems to be the most probable partition for our data set. In agreement with the very low genetic differentiation between governorates, the analysis carried out with the STRUCTURE program did not divide the three populations according to their geographical origin. Nevertheless, most isolates from Gafsa and from Kairouan were grouped in cluster 1 and cluster 2, respectively, and the samples from Sidi Bouzid were distributed in the two clusters (38% in cluster 1 and 62% in cluster 2). Strains showing mixed membership were observed in each population, probably due to the low level of differentiation among populations. The occurrence of gene flow between GF2008-2012 and SBZ2008-2012, as well as between SBZ2008-2012 and KR2008-2012 can be clearly observed in Fig 2C.1. In the STRUCTURE assignment tests, we only reported the results for MIGPRIOR = 0.1, because migration appeared to occur frequently between governorates, thus the optimal MIGPRIOR value was likely to be the highest one [32]. Furthermore, when running the migration model at K = 3 (equal to the number of predefined populations), ten samples were identified as migrants. Among these migrants, two GF2008-2012 samples were assigned to the KR2008-2012 population and one GF2008-2012 sample to the SBZ2008-2012 group. Among the KR2008-2012 samples, only two showed a posterior probability of having recently migrated from Sidi Bouzid. In the SBZ2008-2012 group, five samples were assigned to both Gafsa and Kairouan. These results show a recent connectivity between localities. According to the Q-values of the samples, the KR2008-2012 and SBZ2008-2012 populations seemed to be more inter-connected than the GF2008-2012 population with either SBZ2008-2012 or KR2008-2012.
The low genetic differentiation (F-statistical approach), the recent migration events (Bayesian analysis), the gene flow over the years (F-statistical approach) and the absence of clear separation (Bayesian analysis) between governorates were also confirmed by the finding that the phenetic tree did not highlight any subdivision of the strains according to their geographical origin. (S1 Fig). Analysis of the L. major population structure in historical and recent isolates The data of the ten microsatellite markers were used also to compare the 35 historical (SBZ1991-1992) and 25 recent (SBZ2008-2012) isolates from Sidi Bouzid governorate. Two of the microsatellites were monomorphic in the SBZ1991-1992 population, revealing 26 genotypes in the 35 isolates (0.74). Analysis of the SBZ2008-2012 isolates revealed three polymorphic microsatellites that generated 24 genotypes (0.96). The number of alleles per locus ranged  Table). The pattern of unbiased gene diversity (Hs) increased over time ( Table 2). Comparison of the mean H e and H o values showed a departure from the expected values in SBZ2008-2012 population, whereas both observed and expected heterozygosity were highly similar for SBZ1991-1992 population and no departure from expected values was detected for these strains (Table 2). Indeed, as reported in previous studies, H o was much lower than H e and the inbreeding coefficient F IS revealed a strong heterozygote deficiency in both populations ( Table 2). The F ST value (F ST = 0.213) showed an important genetic differentiation between historical and recent isolates and the migration rate Nm was very low (0.923) ( Table 3). The Bayesian model-based clustering analysis indicated two clusters as the most probable genetic structure of these two populations. The first cluster included most of the historical samples (98.8%), which shared a common genetic background based on the genotyping results, and 19.3% of the recent isolates. The second cluster was mainly (80.7%) composed by recent isolates. STRUCTURE identified 0.42 and 4.82 misclassified samples for the historical and recent populations, respectively. However, as the migration model used different prior and modeling assumptions for identifying migrants, three SBZ2008-2012 isolates showed contrasting patterns of assignment, suggesting high genetic connectivity over time. The Neighbor Joining tree revealed no strict partition between the historical and recent populations (see Fig 3). The tree included five main clusters that corresponded to the two populations obtained with the STRUCTURE analysis: the two upper clusters matched the first STRUCTURE population, while the three remaining clusters corresponded to the second STRUCTURE population.
Analysis of the L. major population structure relative to the two ZCL emergence periods in Kairouan The recent isolates from the Kairouan governorate (KR2008-2012, n = 46) came from the historical focus (1982) of Mnara (MN2008-2012, n = 15) and from the emerging focus (2005) of Chrarda (CH2008-2012, n = 31). Analysis of the genetic data of these two sub-populations showed that six of the ten tested microsatellite loci were polymorphic (4GTG, 39GTG, 45GTG, 1GC, 71AT and 1GACA) in both populations. The remaining four markers (27GTG, 36GTG, 28AT and 1CA) were monomorphic in one or the other population (S1 Table). The allelic richness (A) ranged from 2.2 (MN2008-2012 isolates) to 2.3 (CH2008-2012 isolates) ( Table 2). H s , H o , H e and F IS were higher in the CH2008-2012 (emerging focus) than in the MN2008-2012 population. As in all the populations assessed in this study, the mean H o values in the two subpopulations were extremely low compared to the H e values. The heterozygosity deficit (measured by F IS ) was very high in both populations ( Table 2).
The F ST value showed that the genetic divergence in the two foci was very low, but significant (Table 3), indicating a genotype flow between populations. Quantification of the migration events in the two districts using F-statistical approaches, revealed 17 migrants per population. The Neighbor joining analysis confirmed that there was no genetic structuring between populations (S2 Fig). The posterior probabilities of belonging to a K cluster and the corresponding ΔK values calculated with the STRUCTURE software showed a peak at K = 2, indicating that two genetic clusters were the best solution for this dataset. The STRUCTURE analysis did not detect any recent migrant over the last generations between the partitions defined by the software. The different migration rates observed with the two methods can be explained by the fact that STRUCTURE only identifies very recent migrants, whereas the F-

Discussion
The Sidi Bouzid, Gafsa and Kairouan governorates are the areas where ZCL is most endemic in Tunisia. Despite the cyclic occurrence of outbreaks [8], the annual reported incidence was > 500 cases in Kairouan, and > 1000 cases in Gafsa and Sidi Bouzid in 2004 [37]. In this study, we carried out the first genetic substructure analysis of L. major populations in Tunisia based on genotype data to investigate the spatio-temporal dynamics and the evolution of this species in these three governorates where most human cases are recorded.
Spatial organization of L. major genetic diversity in Tunisia Our findings revealed the presence of a decreasing genetic gradient from Gafsa to Kairouan and Sidi Bouzid between 2008 and 2012. According to the chronology of leishmaniasis emergence in Tunisia, Gafsa is the oldest and the most well-established focus of ZCL. The first outbreak was described in 1884 in El Guettar, in the southern part of the Gafsa governorate. Conversely, the first cases in the Kairouan and in Sidi Bouzid governorates were recorded only in 1982 and 1991, respectively. However, we do not know whether the chronology of disease emergence corresponds to the real spread of leishmaniasis. Furthermore, the governorate disease reports do not record the exact geographic origin of the infection. Despite these limitations, this study shows the presence of some genetic differentiation between Gafsa and Sidi Bouzid and Gafsa and Kairouan, but not between Kairouan and Sidi Bouzid. Furthermore, we obtained a gradient of diversity that progressively decreases from Gafsa to Kairouan and then to Sidi Bouzid. These results are in agreement with the chronology of L. major outbreaks in these three governorates (see above) and do not follow a south-north geographical gradient. It is worth noting that this genetic pattern (i.e., population structuring according to the geography and to the ancientness of the focus) is classically observed for Leishmania species mainly because of the low dispersion capacity of sandflies and reservoirs [38]. Moreover, the STRUCTURE analysis could not cluster the three groups of recent isolates according to their provenance and showed more connectivity between Kairouan and Sidi Bouzid than between Gafsa and Sidi Bouzid. The analyses of the genotypic data, using the Bayesian model-based method and F-statistics, suggest that there had been and still there is a flow of genotypes between governorates, especially between Kairouan and Sidi Bouzid. According to the data published by Chargui et al. [18], L. infantum and L. major in Tunisia do not seem to follow the same genetic and evolutionary pattern. Indeed, although L. infantum seems to have spread from the north to the center of the country [16,39], more genetic diversity, particularly high heterozygosity, was found in the center than in the north.
Two hypotheses might explain the genetic differentiation and diversity patterns: 1) leishmaniasis spread first from Gafsa to Kairouan through human activities (economic activities or social development projects) and then from Kairouan to Sidi Bouzid; 2) parasites have evolved in different ways because of different ecosystems. Concerning the second hypothesis, rodent and sandfly ecology could influence the parasite transmission. Indeed, entomologic studies have demonstrated that in Tunisia sandfly populations vary in density and species composition according to the ecological conditions [40]. Furthermore, rodent populations (P. obesus and M. shawi) also show a different distribution in the different governorates linked to the food availability [11,41,42]. It is worth noting that, like for other Leishmania species (i.e., L. guyanensis, L. braziliensis and L. donovani), we found a strong deficit of heterozygosity in all our populations, in agreement with a recently described mixed-mating system of reproduction (clonality, endogamy, allogamy) [43,44,45,46,47]. Concerning L. infantum in Tunisia, high level of heterozygosity was observed in Kairouan with evidences of hybridization events [18]. These authors also found a deficit of heterozygosity, although they analyzed the MON-24 and MON-1 populations separately. The different genetic patterns and especially the higher heterozygosity observed in L. infantum compared to L. major could be explained by different proportions of the three reproduction mode of Leishmania parasites [43,44,45,46,47]. Nevertheless, the sample size in the work by Chargui et al. [18] was too small (27 strains) to do more extensive comparisons.
Temporal organization of L. major genetic diversity in Tunisia First, we explored the evolution of the L. major population in isolates from Sidi Bouzid governorate between 1991-1992 and 2008-2012. The results show that the recent population is more diverse than the historical one with a significant genetic differentiation over time. In twenty years, L. major evolved with a change in allelic frequencies. The increase of genetic diversity reflects the accumulation of genetic changes overtime in this population. The continuous presence of some genotypes over the two decades and the grouping in the same cluster of both the recent and historical populations (Fig 2) strongly suggest that the recent population evolved from the historical one. This hypothesis is supported by the detection of migrants between the old and recent population. As ZCL incidence and Leishmania genetic diversity have been continuously increasing, we can assume that the Leishmania population has gradually adapted to the environment [7,8,48]. Furthermore, in the last twenty years, Tunisia, like the rest of the world, went through rapid ecosystem modifications. For example, the water project (construction of the Sid Saâd dam in the Nasrallah delegation, Kairouan governorate, in 1982) [49], the pest control program (destruction of rodent borrows and elimination of chenopods) and the development of agricultural projects around the city of Sidi Bouzid (Sidi Bouzid governorate, 1992) could have had an effect on temperature, humidity, soil and vegetation. These anthropic modifications might have disturbed the sandfly and rodent populations and thus impacted the evolution of the Leishmania population since the 1990's. Nevertheless, migration events from other regions cannot be excluded. The calculation of genetic differentiation between L. major population from Sidi Bouzid and those from North Africa [20], Central Asia [20], Middle East [20], Iran [19] and Pakistan [50] revealed considerable genetic differentiation (>0.55) with highly significant p-values (0.05) (S2 Table).
To further understand the L. major temporal/spatial dynamics in Tunisia, we also analyzed recent isolates (2008-2012) from two districts within the Kairouan governorate: Mnara (historical focus) and Chrarda (emerging focus). Considering the long interval (23 years) between the human outbreaks in the two districts, we expected that the more recent focus would show a lower genetic diversity than the historical focus. However, the genetic data showed a slightly higher genetic diversity in the more recent focus (Chrarda), despite the low sample size. In parallel, the low differentiation suggests that these are not isolated populations. Indeed, the F-statistics and Bayesian methods estimated that the Mnara and Chrarda isolates are closely related, although the difference was sufficient to correctly assign most samples to their respective district. The migration analysis using both methods suggests the existence of historical migration events (F-statistics method), but not recent migration events (Bayesian method). These results support the hypothesis that the outbreak in Chrarda is the result of the spread of a population, rather than of a small set of genotypes, from Mnara several years ago. Based on the short distance between the Mnara and Chrarda districts (12 to 20 kilometers), the Leishmania population spread could be explained by human activities and also by the vector or reservoir dynamics. As sandflies are known to be bad flyers, Meriones shawi movements (the disease reservoir) and the human economic and social exchanges could be the main sources of the emergence of L. major in Chrarda.

Conclusion
This study brings new insights into the spatial and temporal evolution of L. major in Tunisia. Over two decades, the L. major population evolved into a new, genetically differentiated population, probably better adapted to the environment. This could explain the increase of parasite transmission to humans and the higher incidence of ZCL in these areas over the last years [7,8,48].
To control the emergence of L. major in new areas in Tunisia, it is now essential to identify the routes of spread. Our findings suggest that the parasite population dynamics do not follow a vertical south-north gradient. Indeed, the disease seems to have spread from Gafsa to Kairouan and then to Sidi Bouzid. Human activities and/or the disease reservoir dynamics might explain this geographically non-gradual spread.
When a disease settles in a new area, it normally sources a subset of the original pathogen population and, as a consequence, genetic diversity should be reduced in the new population. Analysis of the Mnara and Chrarda isolates indicates that the two populations are similar with very low differentiation and historical migration events. This genetic similarity suggests the occurrence of high flow of genotypes between these neighboring populations that would be at the origin of the outbreak in Mnara. The relationships between environmental changes, human activities and reservoir systems have doubtlessly influenced the spread and the evolution of the Tunisian L. major populations as it is largely demonstrated for Leishmania species [2]. More work is needed to assess the influence of the movements and population structures of the rodent reservoirs and vectors on L. major evolution.  Table. Sample code, origin and multilocus microsatellite genotyping results of the L. major isolates analyzed in this study. The microsatellite profiles are designed by three-digit numbers separated by a fraction bar. Each three-digit number assigns the detected allele, coded by the microsatellite size in base pairs (only one size value for homozygous loci and two size values for heterozygous loci). (XLSX) S2 Table. Differentiation measures (F ST ) between Tunisian L. major populations (historical and recent populations) and L. major isolates from Central Asia, Africa, Middle East, Iran and Pakistan. (XLSX)