| Literature DB >> 17612483 |
Claudia E Veit-Kensch1, Ivica Medugorac, Włodzimierz Jedrzejewski, Aleksei N Bunevich, Martin Foerster.
Abstract
Methods based on genetic distance matrices usually lose information during the process of tree-building by converting a multi-dimensional matrix into a phylogenetic tree. We applied a heuristic method of two-dimensional presentation to achieve a better resolution of the relationship between breeds and individuals investigated. Four hundred and nine individuals from nine German dog breed populations and one free-living wolf population were analysed with a marker set of 23 microsatellites. The result of the two-dimensional presentation was partly comparable with and complemented a model-based analysis that uses genotype patterns. The assignment test and the neighbour-joining tree based on allele sharing estimate allocated 99% and 97% of the individuals according to their breed, respectively. The application of the two-dimensional presentation to distances on the basis of the proportion of shared alleles resulted in comparable and further complementary insight into inferred population structure by multilocus genotype data. We expect that the inference of population structure in domesticated species with complex breeding histories can be strongly supported by the two-dimensional presentation based on the described heuristic method.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17612483 PMCID: PMC2682822 DOI: 10.1186/1297-9686-39-4-447
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Sel Evol ISSN: 0999-193X Impact factor: 4.297