| Literature DB >> 29665772 |
Gabriela Padilla-Jacobo1, Horacio Cano-Camacho1, Rigoberto López-Zavala2, María E Cornejo-Pérez1, María G Zavala-Páramo3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The distribution of the wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) extends from Mexico to southeastern Canada and to the eastern and southern regions of the USA. Six subspecies have been described based on morphological characteristics and/or geographical variations in wild and domesticated populations. In this paper, based on DNA sequence data from the mitochondrial D-loop, we investigated the genetic diversity and structure, genealogical relationships, divergence time and demographic history of M. gallopavo populations including domesticated individuals.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29665772 PMCID: PMC5905111 DOI: 10.1186/s12711-018-0388-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Sel Evol ISSN: 0999-193X Impact factor: 4.297
Fig. 1Geographical origin of the turkey samples used for this study. Localities of sampling of turkeys for this study (green dots), and locations of the NCBI GenBank database sequences (blue dots); the shaded polygons correspond to the following geographical regions of Mexico: SMOc = Sierra Madre Occidental (yellow), SMOr = Sierra Madre Oriental (green), TMVB = Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt (blue), and the MP = Mexican Plateau (not shaded)
Localities where samples of wild and domesticated turkeys from Mexico and Guatemala were collected
| Country | Sample types | State | Locality | Sample size |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mexico |
| Durango | Canatlan (UMA El Durangueño) | 9 |
|
| Tamaulipas | Villa de Casas | 4 | |
| Domesticated | Michoacan | Bajio Region (Penjamillo, Indaparapeo, Zacapu, La Piedad, Jimenez, Capula, Churintzio, Zamora) | 33 | |
| Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt Region (Zitacuaro, Cuitzeo, Benito Juarez, Tuxpan, Tacambaro, Ario de Rosales, Salvador Escalante) | 31 | |||
| Balsas Region (Churumuco, Huetamo, Tiquicheo, Tepalcatepec, Tuzantla, Nuevo Urecho, Buenavista, Apatzingan) | 26 | |||
| Sierra Region (Tumbiscatio, Arteaga, Aguililla) | 28 | |||
| Costa Region (Coahuayana, Aquila, Arteaga) | 26 | |||
| Puebla | Rafael Lara Grajales (Benito Juarez Ejido) | 1 | ||
| Totimehuacan (San Baltazar Azumiatla) | 5 | |||
| Soltepec (San Mateo) | 7 | |||
| Hueyotlipan (Sto. Tomas Hueyotlipan) | 4 | |||
| Commercial line Bronze | Michoacan | Ario de Rosales | 9 | |
| Guatemala | Domesticated | Izabal | Izabal | 4 |
| Total | 187 |
Nucleotide sequences of D-loop from M. gallopavo and codes used in the analyses
| Population/subspecies | GenBank accession number | Code in this study | Population/subspecies | GenBank accession number | Code in this study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| AF486960 | MGM60 | GQ303159 | MGarq59 | |
| AY037888 | MGM88 | GQ303160 | MGarq60 | ||
|
| AF486901 | MGS01 | GQ303161 | MGarq61 | |
| AF486902 | MGS02 | GQ303163 | MGarq63 | ||
| AF486905 | MGS05 | GQ303164 | MGarq64 | ||
| AF486911 | MGS11 | GQ303165 | MGarq65 | ||
| AF486914 | MGS14 |
| EF153719 | MG19 | |
| AF486918 | MGS18 | AF172952 | MG52 | ||
| AF486921 | MGS21 | AJ297180 | MG80 | ||
| AF486927 | MGS27 |
| AF487103 | MGI03 | |
| AF172947 | MGS47 | AF487117 | MGI17 | ||
| AF172953 | MGS53 | AF487058 | MGI58 | ||
| AF172954 | MGS54 | AF487059 | MGI59 | ||
| AF172957 | MGS57 | AF487060 | MGI60 | ||
| AF172958 | MGS58 | AF487062 | MGI62 | ||
| AF172960 | MGS60 | AF487063 | MGI63 | ||
| AF172961 | MGS61 | AF487065 | MGI65 | ||
| AF486875 | MGS75 | AF487067 | MGI67 | ||
| AF486876 | MGS76 | AF487071 | MGI71 | ||
| AF486877 | MGS77 | AF487072 | MGI72 | ||
| AF486885 | MGS85 | AF487077 | MGI77 | ||
| AF486887 | MGS87 | AF487085 | MGI85 | ||
| AF486889 | MGS89 | AF487094 | MGI94 | ||
| AF486895 | MGS95 |
| AF487006 | MGMer06 | |
| AF486898 | MGS98 | AF487010 | MGMer10 | ||
|
| AF486931 | MGO31 | AF487023 | MGMer23 | |
| AF486938 | MGO38 | AF487025 | MGMer25 | ||
| AF486944 | MGO44 | AF487039 | MGMer39 | ||
| AF486949 | MGO49 | AF487041 | MGMer41 | ||
| AF486951 | MGO51 | AF487042 | MGMer42 | ||
| AF486953 | MGO53 | AF172948 | MGMer48 | ||
| AF486956 | MGO56 | AF172964 | MGMer64 | ||
| AF486959 | MGO59 | AF486985 | MGMer85 | ||
| GQ303154 | MGarq54 | AF486986 | MGMer86 | ||
| GQ303155 | MGarq55 | AF486997 | MGMer97 | ||
| GQ303156 | MGarq56 | AF486999 | MGMer99 | ||
| GQ303157 | MGarq57 |
| AF487120 | AF487120Aocellata | |
| GQ303158 | MGarq58 | AF487121 | AF487121Aocellata |
Genetic diversity indices for the domesticated/commercial, M. g. mexicana, and M. g. intermedia turkeys included in this study
| Population | n | nt | H | Hd | π | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domesticated/commercial | 174 | 549 | 11 | 0.558 | 0.00153 | 9 |
|
| 9 | 632 | 5 | 0.806 | 0.00483 | 8 |
|
| 4 | 637 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 187 | 535 | 15 | 0.586 | 0.00198 | 16 |
n number of individuals, nt number of characters considered in the matrix, H number of haplotypes, Hd haplotype diversity, π nucleotide diversity, S number of polymorphic sites
Genetic diversity indices for each population
| Population | n | H | S | Hd | π | D-Tajima |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domesticated/commercial | 194 | 13 | 12 | 0.569 | 0.00162 | − 1.60009 (NS, 0.10 > |
|
| 66 | 13 | 13 | 0.851 | 0.00530 | − 0.43092 (NS, |
|
| 217 | 18 | 15 | 0.628 | 0.00826 | 1.09874 (NS, |
|
| 36 | 6 | 9 | 0.308 | 0.00209 | − 1.72617 (NS, |
|
| 29 | 8 | 8 | 0.813 | 0.00402 | − 0.41858 (NS, |
|
| 70 | 22 | 23 | 0.913 | 0.00485 | − 1.71251 (NS, 0.10 > |
| All samples | 612 | 64 | 46 | 0.888 | 0.00774 | − 1.34597 (NS, |
n number of individuals, H number of haplotypes, S polymorphic sites, Hd haplotype diversity, π nucleotide diversity
Pairwise genetic differentiation (FST) of populations
|
| Domesticated/commercial |
|
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| – | |||||
| Domesticated/commercial | 0.50550 | – | ||||
|
| 0.25394 | 0.49995 | – | |||
|
| 0.23189 | 0.35257 | 0.14670 | – | ||
|
| 0.43530 | 0.85891 | 0.65913 | 0.56566 | – | |
|
| 0.25278 | 0.54871 | 0.12507 | 0.09326 | 0.68575 | – |
Summary AMOVA without a priori defined groups and in three groups
| Source of variation | d.f. | Sum of squares | Variance components | Percentage of variation | Fixation index |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Among population | 5 | 387.469 | 0.83993 | 43.98 | |
| Within population | 606 | 648.225 | 1.06968 | 56.02 | |
| Total | 611 | 1035.694 | 1.90961 | 100 | |
|
| |||||
| Among groups | 2 | 299.146 | 0.65399 | 31.14 | |
| Among populations within groups | 3 | 88.323 | 0.37655 | 17.93 | |
| Within populations | 606 | 648.225 | 1.06968 | 50.93 | |
| Total | 611 | 1035.694 | 2.10021 | 100 | |
aIn three groups: (1) mexicana, (2), merriami, and (3) intermedia/osceola/silvestris/domesticated/commercial
Fig. 2Median-joining haplotype network. The relationships between haplotypes identified in domesticated and wild M. gallopavo, including 612 individuals and 64 haplotypes are shown. The size of the circles is proportional to the haplotype frequency. Black circles represent hypothetical intermediates or unsampled haplotypes. Dotted gray lines indicate loops that were broken according to Crandall and Templeton [70]
Fig. 3Genealogy of M. gallopavo obtained with Bayesian inference (BI) and maximum likelihood (ML) analyses. Estimates were based on 441 characters of M. gallopavo mitochondrial control region DNA sequences. The out-group is the sister species M. ocellata. Names of distinct clades/groups are indicated. Values over the branches represent posterior probabilities and bootstrap values (PP/BP). (*) Values below PP = 0.5 or PB = 50. The keys of the taxa are in Table 2
Fig. 4Mismatch distribution and Bayesian skyline plots. Mismatch distribution for the domesticated group (a). Histograms correspond to the observed frequencies; the line represents expected frequencies under the sudden expansion model. Bayesian skyline plots shows the population history of M. gallopavo (b), with the black line indicating median population size estimates expressed in N. through time; colored areas represent 95% HPD intervals
Fig. 5Map of the geographical distribution of M. gallopavo. The shaded areas represent the distribution of the species according to Porter and Kirwan [2]. Pie charts represent the geographical distribution of haplotypes found in each sampling locality