Literature DB >> 28172969

Molecular Biogeography of Prickly Lettuce (Lactuca serriola L.) Shows Traces of Recent Range Expansion.

Luigi D'Andrea1, Patrick Meirmans2, Clemens van de Wiel3, Roberto Guadagnuolo1, Robbert van Treuren4, Gregor Kozlowski5, Hans den Nijs2, François Felber1,6.   

Abstract

Prickly lettuce (Lactuca serriola L., Asteraceae), a wild relative of cultivated lettuce, is an autogamous species which greatly expanded throughout Western and Northern Europe during the last 2 centuries. Here, we present a large-scale biogeographic genetic analysis performed on a dataset represented by 2622 individuals from 110 wild European populations. Thirty-two maternally inherited chloroplast RFLP-markers and 10 nuclear microsatellite loci were used. Microsatellites revealed low genetic variation and high inbreeding coefficients within populations, as well as strong genetic differentiation between populations, which was in accordance with the autogamous breeding system. Analysis of molecular variance based clustering indicated the presence of 3 population clusters, which showed strong geographical patterns. One cluster occupied United Kingdom and part of Northern Europe, and characterized populations with a single predominant genotype. The second mostly combined populations from Northern Europe, while the third cluster grouped populations particularly from Southern Europe. Kriging of gene diversity for L. serriola corroborated northwards and westwards spread from Central (Eastern) Europe. Significant lower genetic diversity characterized the newly colonized parts of the range compared to the historical ones, confirming the importance of founder effects. Stronger pattern of isolation by distance was assessed in the newly colonized areas than in the historical areas (Mantel’s r = 0.20). In the newly colonized areas, populations at short geographic distances were genetically more similar than those in the historical areas. Our results corroborate the species’ recent and rapid northward and westward colonization from Eastern Europe, as well as a decrease of genetic diversity in recently established populations.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biogeography; chloroplast PCR-RFLP; global change; kriging; Lactuca serriola; microsatellites; population genetics; spatial autocorrelation

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28172969     DOI: 10.1093/jhered/esw078

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hered        ISSN: 0022-1503            Impact factor:   2.645


  3 in total

1.  Low population genetic differentiation in two Tamarix species (Tamarix austromongolica and Tamarix chinensis) along the Yellow River.

Authors:  Hongyan Liang; Canran Liu; Yong Li; Yingchun Wang; Yuhua Kong; Jine Quan; Xitian Yang
Journal:  Genetica       Date:  2018-11-20       Impact factor: 1.082

2.  Demographic expansion of two Tamarix species along the Yellow River caused by geological events and climate change in the Pleistocene.

Authors:  Hong-Yan Liang; Zhi-Pei Feng; Bing Pei; Yong Li; Xi-Tian Yang
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-01-08       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  Influence of soil moisture regimes on growth, photosynthetic capacity, leaf biochemistry and reproductive capabilities of the invasive agronomic weed; Lactuca serriola.

Authors:  Aakansha Chadha; Singarayer K Florentine; Bhagirath S Chauhan; Benjamin Long; Mithila Jayasundera
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-06-28       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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