Literature DB >> 21712298

The importance of Anatolian mountains as the cradle of global diversity in Arabis alpina, a key arctic-alpine species.

Stephen W Ansell1, Hans K Stenøien, Michael Grundmann, Stephen J Russell, Marcus A Koch, Harald Schneider, Johannes C Vogel.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Anatolia is a biologically diverse, but phylogeographically under-explored region. It is described as either a centre of origin and long-term Pleistocene refugium, or as a centre for genetic amalgamation, fed from distinct neighbouring refugia. These contrasting hypotheses are tested through a global phylogeographic analysis of the arctic-alpine herb, Arabis alpina.
METHODS: Herbarium and field collections were used to sample comprehensively the entire global range, with special focus on Anatolia and Levant. Sequence variation in the chloroplast DNA trnL-trnF region was examined in 483 accessions. A haplotype genealogy was constructed and phylogeographic methods, demographic analysis and divergence time estimations were used to identify the centres of diversity and to infer colonization history. KEY
RESULTS: Fifty-seven haplotypes were recovered, belonging to three haplogroups with non-overlapping distributions in (1) North America/Europe/northern Africa, (2) the Caucuses/Iranian Plateau/Arabian Peninsula and (3) Ethiopia-eastern Africa. All haplogroups occur within Anatolia, and all intermediate haplotypes linking the three haplogroups are endemic to central Anatolia and Levant, where haplotypic and nucleotide diversities exceeded all other regions. The local pattern of haplotype distribution strongly resembles the global pattern, and the haplotypes began to diverge approx. 2·7 Mya, coinciding with the climate cooling of the early Middle Pleistocene.
CONCLUSIONS: The phylogeographic structure of Arabis alpina is consistent with Anatolia being the cradle of origin for global genetic diversification. The highly structured landscape in combination with the Pleistocene climate fluctuations has created a network of mountain refugia and the accumulation of spatially arranged genotypes. This local Pleistocene population history has subsequently left a genetic imprint at the global scale, through four range expansions from the Anatolian diversity centre into Europe, the Near East, Arabia and Africa. Hence this study also illustrates the importance of sampling and scaling effects when translating global from local diversity patterns during phylogeographic analyses.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21712298      PMCID: PMC3143044          DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcr134

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Bot        ISSN: 0305-7364            Impact factor:   4.357


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8.  Genetic consequences of Pleistocene range shifts: contrast between the Arctic, the Alps and the East African mountains.

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2.  Demography and mating system shape the genome-wide impact of purifying selection in Arabis alpina.

Authors:  Benjamin Laenen; Andrew Tedder; Michael D Nowak; Per Toräng; Jörg Wunder; Stefan Wötzel; Kim A Steige; Yiannis Kourmpetis; Thomas Odong; Andreas D Drouzas; Marco C A M Bink; Jon Ågren; George Coupland; Tanja Slotte
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6.  Sporophytic self-incompatibility genes and mating system variation in Arabis alpina.

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