58 research outputs found
Potential gene flow in natural populations of the Drosophila ananassae species cluster inferred from a nuclear mitochondrial pseudogene
A pseudogene with 94% similarity to mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) was identified and localized to chromosome 4 of Drosophila ananassae. Because this chromosome is believed to have reduced recombination, its history can be traced using the pseudo-COI sequence. Pseudo-COI sequences were obtained from 27 iso-female lines of six taxa belonging to the D. ananassae species cluster in which reproductive isolation is incomplete. The phylogenetic network constructed from seven recognized haplotypes (#0–#6) indicated that different taxa inhabiting the same geographic area share the haplotypes: #1 from Papua New Guinean populations of D. ananassae and pallidosa-like-Wau; #2 from Papua New Guinean populations of D. ananassae, pallidosa-like, and papuensis-like; and #4 from South Pacific populations of D. ananassae and D. pallidosa. Taxon-K has a unique haplotype (#6), and 18 mutation steps separate it from the closest haplotype, #2. We discuss the possibility of chromosome 4 introgression beyond taxon boundaries
Evolutionary Relationships in the Drosophila ananassae Species Cluster Based on Introns of Multiple Nuclear Loci
The Drosophila ananassae species cluster includes D. ananassae, D. pallidosa, D. parapallidosa, and the cryptic species “pallidosa-like”, “pallidosa-like Wau” and “papuensis-like” Some of the taxa are sympatric in the South Pacific, Papua New Guinea, and Southeast Asia, and gene flow between different taxa has been suspected for a handful of genes. In the present analysis, we examined DNA sequences of introns in four loci: alpha actinin (Actn) on XL, white (w) on XR, CG7785 on 2L, and zinc ion transmembrane transporter 63C (ZnT63C) on 2R. Phylogenetic trees (neighbor-joining and haplotype network) were inconsistent among these loci. Some haplotypes shared between taxa were found for w, CG7785, and ZnT63C, suggesting recent gene flow. However, no haplotypes were shared, for example, between D. ananassae and D. pallidosa for CG7785, which is close to the proximal breakpoint of In(2L)D. This suggests that taxon-specific inversions prevent gene flow, as predicted by the chromosomal speciation hypothesis
Reproductive Isolation Among Geographical Populations of Drosophila Bipectinata Duda (Diptera, Drosophilidae) with Recognition of Three Subspecies
Solid-Liquid Separation Phenomenon on the Surface of an Oil, Wax and Pigments Mixture (V)
Pathological findings of guinea-pigs infected intratracheally with Rhodococcus (Corynebacterium) equi.
Genetics of sexual isolation based on courtship song between two sympatric species: Drosophila ananassae and D. pallidosa
Solid-liquid Separation Phenomenon on the Surface of an Oil, Wax and Pigments Mixture (III)
Solid-Liquid Separation Phenomenon on the Surface of an Oil, Wax and Pigments Mixture (IV)
- …
