| Literature DB >> 27350815 |
Hitoshi Suzuki1, Lyudmila V Yakimenko2, Daiki Usuda3, Liubov V Frisman4.
Abstract
Here we describe recent advances in our understanding of the natural history of the house mouse, Mus musculus, with a focus on the genetic characteristics of the home territories and how this relates to prehistoric eastward movements from the predicted source areas. Recent studies of mitochondrial and nuclear gene sequences provide insight into the ancient divergence of the three subspecies groups, M. m. castaneus (CAS), M. m. domesticus (DOM), and M. m. musculus (MUS), with inferred natural habits (homelands) in central (Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India), western (western Iran), and northern (central Asia) areas, respectively. Our mitochondrial DNA and nuclear gene analyses indicate that only one local lineage of CAS extended its range via historical rapid expansion at two different times to Southeast Asia and East Asia, including Japan and southern Sakhalin. This is suggestive of a rapid range expansion of CAS out of its homeland, perhaps associated with the spread of agricultural practices in Asia. The subspecies group MUS now occurs in a large portion of northern Eurasia from eastern Europe in the West to the Japanese Islands in the East, including Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, southern Siberia, northern China, and Korea, showing divergent patterns in terms of Mus musculus genetics, particularly in relation to nuclear gene sequences, allozymes (e.g., hemoglobin), morphological characteristics, and cytogenetic C-banding patterns. In this review article, we explain the complex spatial patterns of MUS. We postulate that two historical dispersal events took place, from two different source areas, and tentatively assign the taxon names "musculus" and "wagneri" to the two populations, which are associated with distinct genetic modules.Entities:
Keywords: Anthropogenic movement; Mus musculus wagneri; Phylogeography; Prehistoric colonization
Year: 2015 PMID: 27350815 PMCID: PMC4918131 DOI: 10.1186/s41021-015-0013-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes Environ ISSN: 1880-7046
Fig. 1Geographic distribution of the five mtDNA phylogroups of the house mouse Mus musculus [3, 5], with their tentatively predicted homelands (a). Five distinct lineages are represented by the following taxon names: M. m. musculus (MUS), M. m. domesticus (DOM), M. m. castaneus (CAS), M. m. gentilulus (GEN), and the Nepalese lineage (NEP). Further subdivision of the MUS lineages into two others (MUS-1, MUS-2), and the MUS-1 sublineage, in turn, into three others (MUS-1a, MUS-1b, MUS-1c) was proposed in a previous study [5]. The sub-group types of MUS-1 and CAS (CAS 1–4) are shown in circles with letters or numerals, respectively [5]. A maximum likelihood tree based on mitochondrial cytochrome b gene sequences (13; Sakuma et al., unpublished data) (b). A median joining network is shown for haplotypes belonging to the mitochondrial subgroup CAS-1, which is thought to have experienced rapid expansion, perhaps associated with human activities related to agricultural development [5]. The scale bar shown below the tree represents genetic distance (c). The next range extension of the CAS-1 lineage is related to the CAS-1a group expansion, perhaps correlating with the spread of rice cultivation from South China to the Japanese Islands and the southern part of Sakhalin Island
Fig. 2Nucleotide sequences of eight linked genes on mouse chromosome 8 were determined using wild mouse specimens representing the three major subspecies groups of M. m. domesticus (DOM), M. m. castaneus (CAS), and M. m. musculus (MUS) mice from Eurasia [13, 25] (a). Median joining networks of the Fanca and Dbndd1 genes are shown as representative examples of low and highly divergent states, respectively, of the subspecies group (MUS) (b). A neighbor-net network with concatenated sequences (n = 196) exhibits clusters of the three major subspecies groups and a variety of recombinant haplotypes [13] (c). The two putative phylogroups of MUS are designated MUS-I and MUS-II [25]. A schematic view of the geographic subdivisions of the Mus musculus musculus house mouse subspecies groups (MUS) (d). The subdivision of the house mouse into the tentatively designated phylogroups musculus and wagneri has been inferred from morphological, ecological, cytogenetic, electrophoretic, and molecular studies (e.g. [25, 28–31]). Three possible source areas of the human-associated prehistoric dispersals of MUS are marked with star symbols: 1) Transcaucasia, 2) Turkmenistan/Kazakhstan, and 3) the Taklamakan Desert (see text)