Literature DB >> 11240635

Patterns of DNA sequence variation in chromosomally recognized taxa of Anopheles gambiae: evidence from rDNA and single-copy loci.

O Mukabayire1, J Caridi, X Wang, Y T Touré, M Coluzzi, N J Besansky.   

Abstract

Patterns of DNA sequence variation in the ribosomal DNA (rDNA) second internal transcribed spacer (ITS2) and five unlinked single-copy nuclear loci were examined for evidence of reproductive isolation among four chromosomally recognized taxa of Anopheles gambiae from West Africa: Savanna, Bamako, Mopti and Forest, as well as sibling species An. arabiensis and An. merus. Included among the single-copy loci were three sequence-tagged random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) loci, two of which (R15 and R37) had been reported as discriminating between Mopti and other chromosomal forms. Each of the five single-copy sequences were highly polymorphic in most samples. However, the R15 and R37 loci had no diagnostic value, and therefore are not recommended as tools in recognition of field-collected An. gambiae chromosomal forms. Although pairwise comparisons between species generally revealed significant levels of differentiation at all five loci, variation was not partitioned by chromosomal form within An. gambiae at any single-copy locus examined. The few exceptions to these trends appear related to a location either inside or nearby chromosomal inversions. At the tryptophan oxygenase locus inside inversion 2Rb, variation was structured only by inversion orientation and not by taxonomic designation even between An. gambiae and An. arabiensis, providing the first molecular evidence that the 2Rb inversion was transferred between species by introgressive hybridization. By contrast, the rDNA showed fixed differences between species and a difference diagnostic for Mopti, consistent with effective, if not complete, reproductive isolation. The apparent disagreement between the data from this locus and multiple single-copy loci within An. gambiae may be explained by the much lower effective population size of rDNA, owing to concerted evolution, which confers increased sensitivity at much shorter divergence times. Taken together with the accompanying reports by della Torre et al. (2001), Favia et al. (2001) and Gentile et al. (2001), our data suggest that neutral molecular markers may not have the sensitivity required to detect isolation between these recently established taxa.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11240635     DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2583.2001.00238.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Insect Mol Biol        ISSN: 0962-1075            Impact factor:   3.585


  23 in total

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Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2002-06-11       Impact factor: 11.205

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3.  Ecological zones rather than molecular forms predict genetic differentiation in the malaria vector Anopheles gambiae s.s. in Ghana.

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Authors:  Yoosook Lee; Clare D Marsden; Laura C Norris; Travis C Collier; Bradley J Main; Abdrahamane Fofana; Anthony J Cornel; Gregory C Lanzaro
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5.  Sex-linked differentiation between incipient species of Anopheles gambiae.

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6.  When genetic distance matters: measuring genetic differentiation at microsatellite loci in whole-genome scans of recent and incipient mosquito species.

Authors:  R Wang; L Zheng; Y T Touré; T Dandekar; F C Kafatos
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2001-09-11       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Dry season reproductive depression of Anopheles gambiae in the Sahel.

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8.  Semipermeable species boundaries between Anopheles gambiae and Anopheles arabiensis: evidence from multilocus DNA sequence variation.

Authors:  N J Besansky; J Krzywinski; T Lehmann; F Simard; M Kern; O Mukabayire; D Fontenille; Y Touré; N'F Sagnon
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2003-08-28       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Spatial swarm segregation and reproductive isolation between the molecular forms of Anopheles gambiae.

Authors:  Abdoulaye Diabaté; Adama Dao; Alpha S Yaro; Abdoulaye Adamou; Rodrigo Gonzalez; Nicholas C Manoukis; Sékou F Traoré; Robert W Gwadz; Tovi Lehmann
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10.  Authentication scheme for routine verification of genetically similar laboratory colonies: a trial with Anopheles gambiae.

Authors:  Elien E Wilkins; Paula L Marcet; Alice C Sutcliffe; Paul I Howell
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