| Literature DB >> 20966253 |
M K N Lawniczak1, S J Emrich, A K Holloway, A P Regier, M Olson, B White, S Redmond, L Fulton, E Appelbaum, J Godfrey, C Farmer, A Chinwalla, S-P Yang, P Minx, J Nelson, K Kyung, B P Walenz, E Garcia-Hernandez, M Aguiar, L D Viswanathan, Y-H Rogers, R L Strausberg, C A Saski, D Lawson, F H Collins, F C Kafatos, G K Christophides, S W Clifton, E F Kirkness, N J Besansky.
Abstract
The Afrotropical mosquito Anopheles gambiae sensu stricto, a major vector of malaria, is currently undergoing speciation into the M and S molecular forms. These forms have diverged in larval ecology and reproductive behavior through unknown genetic mechanisms, despite considerable levels of hybridization. Previous genome-wide scans using gene-based microarrays uncovered divergence between M and S that was largely confined to gene-poor pericentromeric regions, prompting a speciation-with-ongoing-gene-flow model that implicated only about 3% of the genome near centromeres in the speciation process. Here, based on the complete M and S genome sequences, we report widespread and heterogeneous genomic divergence inconsistent with appreciable levels of interform gene flow, suggesting a more advanced speciation process and greater challenges to identify genes critical to initiating that process.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20966253 PMCID: PMC3674514 DOI: 10.1126/science.1195755
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728