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Mitochondrial capture misleads about ecological speciation in the Daphnia pulex complex
S. Marková, F. Dufresne, M. Manca, P. Kotlík,
Jazyk angličtina Země Spojené státy americké
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články, práce podpořená grantem
NLK
Directory of Open Access Journals
od 2006
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od 2006
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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od 2006-12-01
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od 2006-01-01
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od 2006-10-01
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od 2006-01-01
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od 2008-01-01
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od 2006-12-01
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od 2006-12-01
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od 2006
- MeSH
- Daphnia klasifikace genetika MeSH
- druhová specificita MeSH
- fylogeneze MeSH
- fylogeografie MeSH
- mitochondriální DNA chemie MeSH
- rekombinace genetická MeSH
- sekvenční analýza DNA MeSH
- tok genů MeSH
- vznik druhů (genetika) * MeSH
- zvířata MeSH
- Check Tag
- zvířata MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
The North American ecological species Daphniapulicaria and Daphniapulex are thought to have diverged from a common ancestor by adaptation to sympatric but ecologically distinct lake and pond habitats respectively. Based on mtDNA relationships, European D. pulicaria is considered a different species only distantly related to its North American counterpart, but both species share a lactate dehydrogenase (Ldh) allele F supposedly involved in lake adaptation in North America, and the same allele is also carried by the related Holarctic Daphniatenebrosa. The correct inference of the species' ancestral relationships is therefore critical for understanding the origin of their adaptive divergence. Our species tree inferred from unlinked nuclear loci for D. pulicaria and D. pulex resolved the European and North American D. pulicaria as sister clades, and we argue that the discordant mtDNA gene tree is best explained by capture of D. pulex mtDNA by D. pulicaria in North America. The Ldh gene tree shows that F-class alleles in D. pulicaria and D. tenebrosa are due to common descent (as opposed to introgression), with D. tenebrosa alleles paraphyletic with respect to D. pulicaria alleles. That D. tenebrosa still segregates the ancestral and derived amino acids at the two sites distinguishing the pond and lake alleles suggests that D. pulicaria inherited the derived states from the D. tenebrosa ancestry. Our results suggest that some adaptations restricting the gene flow between D. pulicaria and D. pulex might have evolved in response to selection in ancestral environments rather than in the species' current sympatric habitats. The Arctic (D. tenebrosa) populations are likely to provide important clues about these issues.
Citace poskytuje Crossref.org
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