Literature DB >> 11102384

The population genetics of the origin and divergence of the Drosophila simulans complex species.

R M Kliman1, P Andolfatto, J A Coyne, F Depaulis, M Kreitman, A J Berry, J McCarter, J Wakeley, J Hey.   

Abstract

The origins and divergence of Drosophila simulans and close relatives D. mauritiana and D. sechellia were examined using the patterns of DNA sequence variation found within and between species at 14 different genes. D. sechellia consistently revealed low levels of polymorphism, and genes from D. sechellia have accumulated mutations at a rate that is approximately 50% higher than the same genes from D. simulans. At synonymous sites, D. sechellia has experienced a significant excess of unpreferred codon substitutions. Together these observations suggest that D. sechellia has had a reduced effective population size for some time, and that it is accumulating slightly deleterious mutations as a result. D. simulans and D. mauritiana are both highly polymorphic and the two species share many polymorphisms, probably since the time of common ancestry. A simple isolation speciation model, with zero gene flow following incipient species separation, was fitted to both the simulans/mauritiana divergence and the simulans/sechellia divergence. In both cases the model fit the data quite well, and the analyses revealed little evidence of gene flow between the species. The exception is one gene copy at one locus in D. sechellia, which closely resembled other D. simulans sequences. The overall picture is of two allopatric speciation events that occurred quite near one another in time.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11102384      PMCID: PMC1461354     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genetics        ISSN: 0016-6731            Impact factor:   4.562


  61 in total

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Journal:  Genet Res       Date:  1974-02       Impact factor: 1.588

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  132 in total

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2.  Nuclear gene genealogies reveal historical, demographic and selective factors associated with speciation in field crickets.

Authors:  Richard E Broughton; Richard G Harrison
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 4.562

3.  Demography and natural selection have shaped genetic variation in Drosophila melanogaster: a multi-locus approach.

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5.  Tissue-Specific cis-Regulatory Divergence Implicates eloF in Inhibiting Interspecies Mating in Drosophila.

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7.  Patterns of DNA sequence variation suggest the recent action of positive selection in the janus-ocnus region of Drosophila simulans.

Authors:  J Parsch; C D Meiklejohn; D L Hartl
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 4.562

8.  Recombination yet inefficient selection along the Drosophila melanogaster subgroup's fourth chromosome.

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Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2009-12-14       Impact factor: 16.240

9.  Phylogenetic incongruence in the Drosophila melanogaster species group.

Authors:  Alex Wong; Jeffrey D Jensen; John E Pool; Charles F Aquadro
Journal:  Mol Phylogenet Evol       Date:  2006-09-09       Impact factor: 4.286

10.  Hitchhiking effects of recurrent beneficial amino acid substitutions in the Drosophila melanogaster genome.

Authors:  Peter Andolfatto
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2007-11-07       Impact factor: 9.043

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