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1.
The phylogenetic relationships among nine Drosophila species belonging to the obscura group were investigated by establishing the segments displaying banding homologies in their element B (equivalent to the U element of D. subobscura). The phylogenetic ordering of the species was accomplished using overlapping inversions. Two African species, D. kitumensis and D. microlabis, were investigated. These species are homosequential for their element B gene arrangement but differ from that of D. obscura by several rearrangements. Drosophila obscura seems to be most closely related to D. subsilvestris, from which the respective element B gene arrangements differ at least by six inversions. Three species, D. obscura, D. ambigua, and D. tristis, are closely related and form a cluster. Drosophila obscura displays an element B polymorphism for a pericentric inversion for which D. ambigua is fixed for one gene arrangement and D. tristis for the other. Both D. ambigua and D. tristis share a short distal inversion in the small arm of the chromosome, and differ in this respect from D. obscura. Drosophila madeirensis, D. guanche, and D. subobscura all share the same element B gene arrangement, which is acrocentric, but metacentric in all the other species mentioned. It was found that the gene arrangements of the species from the obscura cluster seem to occupy an intermediate position between those of the species of the D. subobscura cluster and those of the African one. The data reported generally are in good agreement with information provided in the literature.  相似文献   

2.
C. Segarra  G. Ribo    M. Aguade 《Genetics》1996,144(1):139-146
Twenty-two markers located on Muller's elements D or E have been mapped by in situ hybridization in six species of the obscura group of Drosophila and in D. melanogaster. The obscura species can be grouped into a Palearctic cluster (D. subobscura, D. madeirensis and D. guanche) and a Nearctic one (D. pseudoobscura, D. persimilis and D. miranda). Eleven of the probes contain known genes: E74, Acp70A, Est5, hsp28/23, hsp83, emc, hsp70, Xdh, Acph-1, Cec and rp49. The remaining probes are recombinant phages isolated from a D. subobscura genomic library. All these markers hybridize to the putative homologous chromosome or chromosomal arm of elements D and E. Thus, these elements have conserved their genic content during species divergence. Chromosomal homologies proposed previously for each element among the species of the same cluster have been compared with the present results. The distribution of markers within each element has changed considerably as inferred from pairwise comparisons of obscura species included in the two different clusters. Only chromosomal segments defined by closely linked markers have been conserved: one such segment has been detected in element D and three in element E between D. subobscura and D. pseudoobscura.  相似文献   

3.
The phylogenetic relationship of Eurasian species of the Drosophila obscura species group remains ambiguous in spite of intensive analyses based on morphology, allozymes and DNA sequences. The present analysis based on sequence data for cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) and a-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (Gpdh) suggests that the phylogenetic position of D. alpina is also ambiguous. These ambiguities have been considered to be attributable to rapid phyletic radiation in this group at an early stage of its evolution. Overwintering strategies are diversified among these species: D. alpina and D. subsihestris pass the winter in pupal diapause, D. bifasciata and D. obscura in reproductive diapause, and D. subobscura and D. guanche without entering diapause. This diversity may also suggest rapid radiation at an early phase of adaptations to temperate climates. On the other hand, adult tolerance of cold was closely related to overwintering strategy and distribution: D. obscura and D. bifasciata with reproductive diapause were very tolerant; D. alpina and D. subsilvestris which pass the winter in pupal diapause were less tolerant; D. subobscura having no diapause was moderately tolerant and D. guanche occurring in the Canary Islands was rather susceptible. Tolerance of high temperature at the preimaginal stages seemed to be also associated with overwintering strategy; i.e. lower in the species with pupal diapause than in those with reproductive diapause or without diapause mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
C. Segarra  M. Aguade 《Genetics》1992,130(3):513-521
Nine single copy regions located on the X chromosome have been mapped by in situ hybridization in six species of the obscura group of Drosophila. Three Palearctic species, D. subobscura, D. madeirensis and D. guanche, and three Nearctic species, D. pseudoobscura, D. persimilis and D. miranda, have been studied. Eight of the regions include known genes from D. melanogaster (Pgd, zeste, white, cut, vermilion, RNA polymerase II 215, forked and suppressor of forked) and the ninth region (lambda DsubF6) has not yet been characterized. In all six species, as in D. melanogaster, all probes hybridize to a single site. Established chromosomal arm homologies of Muller's element A are only partly supported by present results since two of the probes (Pgd and zeste) hybridize at the proximal end of the XR chromosomal arm in the three Nearctic species. In addition to the centric fusion of Muller's A (= XL) and D (= XR) elements, the metacentric X chromosome of the Nearctic species requires a pericentric inversion to account for this result. Previously proposed homologies of particular chromosomal regions of the A (= X) chromosome in the three species of the D. subobscura cluster and of the XL chromosomal arm in the three species of the D. pseudoobscura cluster are discussed in light of the present results. Location of the studied markers has changed drastically not only since the divergence between the melanogaster and obscura groups but also since the Palearctic and Nearctic species of the obscura group diverged.  相似文献   

5.
Chromosomal homologies among the four palearctic Drosophila obscura group species D. ambigua, D. tristis, D. obscura, and D. subsilvestris and the "trans-palearctic" species D. bifasciata were established by in situ hybridization using the 5C actin gene of D. melanogaster as a probe. In all species two labeling sites were detected in each of chromosomal elements C and E and one in each of chromosomal elements A and D. In addition one labeling site was detected on element B for the species D. subsilvestris and D. bifasciata. The conservative distribution pattern of the genes of the actin multigene family, the similarities of the locations of the actin genes in the chromosomes of the five species studied, together with the concordant evidence of synteny of visible and other genetic markers as well as the similarities in banding patterns, all agree with the conclusion that the chromosomal elements have retained their essential identity throughout the evolution of these species. Using in situ hybridization detailed information of some homologous regions of chromosomes can also be established.  相似文献   

6.
7.
SGM (Drosophila subobscura, Drosophila guanche, and Drosophila madeirensis) transposons are a family of transposable elements (TEs) in Drosophila with some functional and structural similarities to miniature inverted-repeat transposable elements (MITEs). These elements were recently active in D. subobscura and D. madeirensis (1-2 MYA), but in D. guanche (3-4 MYA), they gave rise to a species-specifically amplified satellite DNA making up approximately 10% of its genome. SGM elements were already active in the common ancestor of all three species, giving rise to the A-type specific promoter section of the P:-related neogene cluster. SGM sequences are similar to elements found in other obscura group species, such as the ISY elements in D. miranda and the ISamb elements in Drosophila ambigua. SGM elements are composed of different sequence modules, and some of them, i.e., LS and LS-core, are found throughout the Drosophila and Sophophora radiation with similarity to more distantly related TEs. The LS-core module is highly enriched in the noncoding sections of the Drosophila melanogaster genome, suggesting potential regulatory host gene functions. The SGM elements can be considered as a model system elucidating the evolutionary dynamics of mobile elements in their arms race with host-directed silencing mechanisms and their evolutionary impact on the structure and composition of their respective host genomes.  相似文献   

8.
The phylogenetic relationships of 15 species of the obscura group of Drosophila were analysed by use of one- and two-dimensional electrophoresis. Genetic distances based on two-dimensional data are five times smaller than those based on native proteins. From the data, it is proposed that the species radiation of the obscura group happened in two evolutionary bursts, the first one giving rise to at least four palearctic proto-lineages ( bifasciata, obscura (including D. subsilvestris ), subobscura , and microlabis ) and one or two proto-nearctic lineages ( affinis, pseudoobscura ), and the second, more recent burst giving rise to the current speciation within lineages.

Zusammenfassung


Phylogenie der Arten der Drosophila obscura-Gruppe abgeleitet von ein- und zweidimensionaler Protein-Elektrophorese
Die phylogenetischen Verwandtschaftsbeziehungen von 15 Arten der obscura -Gruppe der Gattung Drosophila wurden mit Hilfe von ein-und zweidimensionaler Elektrophorese von Proteinen untersucht. Die genetische Distanzen, die aus den Ergebnissen der zweidimensionalen Elektrophoresen ermittelt wurden, waren fünfmal kleiner als solche, die von nativen Proteinen kommen. Aufgrund der Untersuchungsergebnisse wird angenommen, daß die Radiation der Arten der obscura-Gruppe in zwei evolutiven Schüben erfolgt sei; der erste Schub hätte zu zumindest vier palaerktischen ( bifasciata, obscura mit D. subsilvestris, subobscura und microlabis ) und zwei proto-ne arktischen Linien ( affinis, pseudoobscura ) geführt. In einem zweiten Schub wären dann die endgültigen rezenten Arten entstanden.  相似文献   

9.
The locations of 77 markers along the chromosomal elements B (41 markers) and C (36 markers) of Drosophila subobscura, D. pseudoobscura, and D. melanogaster were obtained by in situ hybridization on polytene chromosomes. In comparisons between D. subobscura and D. pseudoobscura, 10 conserved segments (accounting for 32% of the chromosomal length) were detected on element B and eight (17% of the chromosomal length) on element C. The fixation rate of paracentric inversions inferred by a maximum likelihood approach differs significantly between elements. Muller's element C (0.17 breakpoints/Mb/million years) is evolving two times faster than element B (0.08 breakpoints/Mb/million years). This difference in the evolutionary rate is paralleled by differences in the extent of chromosomal polymorphism in the corresponding lineages. Element C is highly polymorphic in D. subobscura, D. pseudoobscura, and in other obscura group species such as D. obscura and D. athabasca. In contrast, the level of polymorphism in element B is much lower in these species. The fixation rates of paracentric inversions estimated in the present study between species of the Sophophora subgenus are the highest estimates so far reported in the genus for the autosomes. At the subgenus level, there is also a parallelism between the high fixation rate and the classical observation that the species of the Sophophora subgenus tend to be more polymorphic than the species of the Drosophila subgenus. Therefore, the detected relationship between level of polymorphism and evolutionary rate might be a general characteristic of chromosomal evolution in the genus Drosophila.  相似文献   

10.
The bilbo element is a non-LTR retrotransposon isolated from Drosophila subobscura. We conducted a distribution survey by Southern blot for 52 species of the family Drosophilidae, mainly from the obscura and melanogaster groups. Most of the analyzed species bear sequences homologous to bilbo from D. subobscura. In the obscura group, species from the same species subgroup also share similar Southern blot patterns. To investigate the phylogenetic relationship among these elements, we analyzed eight copies of a short sequence of the element from several species of the obscura group. The obtained phylogram agrees with the phylogeny of the species, which suggests vertical transmission of the element.  相似文献   

11.
In contrast to Drosophila melanogaster and Drosophila simulans, the yellow (y) gene region of Drosophila subobscura is not located in a region with a strong reduction in recombination. In addition, this gene maps very close to the breakpoints of different inversions that segregate as polymorphic in natural populations of D. subobscura. Therefore, levels of variation at the y gene region in this species relative to those found in D. melanogaster and D. simulans may be affected not only by the change in the recombinational environment, but also by the presence of inversion polymorphism. To further investigate these aspects, an approximately 5.4-kb region of the A (=X) chromosome including the y gene was sequenced in 25 lines of D. subobscura and in the closely related species Drosophila madeirensis and Drosophila guanche. The D. subobscura lines studied differed in their A-chromosomal arrangements, A(st), A(2), and A(1). Unlike in D. melanogaster and D. simulans, levels of variation at the y gene region of D. subobscura are not reduced relative to those found at other genomic regions in the same species (rp49, Acp70A, and Acph-1). This result supports the effect of the change in the recombinational environment of a particular gene on the level of neutral variation. In addition, nucleotide variation is affected by chromosomal polymorphism. A strong genetic differentiation is detected between the A(1) arrangement and either A(st) or A(2), but not between A(st) and A(2). This result is consistent with the location of the y gene relative to the breakpoints of inversions A(1) and A(2). In addition, the pattern of nucleotide polymorphism in A(st)+A(2) and A(1) seems to point out that variation at the y gene region within these chromosomal classes is in the phase transient to equilibrium. The estimated ages of these arrangements assuming a star genealogy indicate that their origin cannot predate the D. madeirensis split. Therefore, the present results are consistent with a chromosomal phylogeny where Am(1), which is an arrangement present in D. madeirensis but absent in current populations of D. subobscura, would be the ancestral arrangement.  相似文献   

12.
An approximately 6.9-kb region encompassing the RpII215 gene was sequenced for 24 individuals of the island endemic species Drosophila guanche. The comparative analysis of synonymous polymorphism and divergence in D. guanche and D. subobscura, two species with pronounced differences in population size, allows contrasting the nearly neutral character of synonymous mutations. In D. guanche, unlike in D. subobscura, (1) the ratio of preferred to unpreferred synonymous changes was similar for polymorphic and fixed changes, (2) the numbers of preferred and unpreferred changes, both polymorphic and fixed, could be explained by the mutational process, and (3) the estimated scaled selection coefficient for unpreferred mutations did not differ significantly from zero. Additionally, the comparative analysis revealed that both the ratio of preferred to unpreferred synonymous changes and the frequency spectrum of unpreferred polymorphic mutations differed significantly between species. All these results indicate that a large fraction of synonymous mutations in the RpII215 gene behave as effectively neutral in D. guanche, whereas they are weakly selected in D. subobscura. The reduced efficacy of selection in the insular species constitutes strong evidence of the nearly neutral character of synonymous mutations and, therefore, of the role of weak selection in maintaining codon bias.  相似文献   

13.
The complete coding region of the yellow (y) gene was sequenced in different Drosophila species. In the species of the melanogaster subgroup (D. melanogaster, D. simulans, D. mauritiana, D. yakuba, and D. erecta), this gene is located at the tip of the X chromosome in a region with a strong reduction in recombination rate. In contrast, in D. ananassae (included in the ananassae subgroup of the melanogaster group) and in the obscura group species (D. subobscura, D. madeirensis, D. guanche, and D. pseudoobscura), the y gene is located in regions with normal recombination rates. As predicted by the hitchhiking and background selection models, this change in the recombinational environment affected synonymous divergence in the y-gene-coding region. Estimates of the number of synonymous substitutions per site were much lower between the obscura group species and D. ananassae than between the species of the obscura group and the melanogaster subgroup. In fact, a highly significant increase in the rate of synonymous substitution was detected in all lineages leading to the species of the melanogaster subgroup relative to the D. ananassae lineage. This increase can be explained by a higher fixation rate of mutations from preferred to unpreferred codons (slightly deleterious mutations). The lower codon bias detected in all species of the melanogaster subgroup relative to D. ananassae (or to the obscura group species) would be consistent with this proposal. Therefore, at least in Drosophila, changes in the recombination rate in different lineages might cause deviations of the molecular-clock hypothesis and contribute to the overdispersion of the rate of synonymous substitution. In contrast, the change in the recombinational environment of the y gene has no detectable effect on the rate of amino acid replacement in the Yellow protein.  相似文献   

14.
Llopart A  Aguadé M 《Genetics》1999,152(1):269-280
The region encompassing the RpII215 gene that encodes the largest component of the RNA polymerase II complex (1889 amino acids) has been sequenced in Drosophila subobscura, D. madeirensis, D. guanche, and D. pseudoobscura. Nonsynonymous divergence estimates (Ka) indicate that this gene has a very low rate of amino acid replacements. Given its low Ka and constitutive expression, synonymous substitution rates are, however, unexpectedly high. Sequence comparisons have allowed the molecular clock hypothesis to be tested. D. guanche is an insular species and it is therefore expected to have a reduced effective size relative to D. subobscura. The significantly higher rate of synonymous substitutions detected in the D. guanche lineage could be explained if synonymous mutations behave as nearly neutral. Significant departure from the molecular clock hypothesis for synonymous and nonsynonymous substitutions was detected when comparing the D. subobscura, D. pseudoobscura, and D. melanogaster lineages. Codon bias and synonymous divergence between D. subobscura and D. melanogaster were negatively correlated across the RpII215 coding region, which indicates that selection coefficients for synonymous mutations vary across the gene. The C-terminal domain (CTD) of the RpII215 protein is structurally and functionally differentiated from the rest of the protein. Synonymous substitution rates were significantly different in both regions, which strongly indicates that synonymous mutations in the CTD and in the non-CTD regions are under detectably different selection coefficients.  相似文献   

15.
Biochemical properties of enzyme alpha-amylase were surveyed in Drosophila obscura Old world group of species (D. subobscura, D. ambigua, D. obscura and D. tristis) sampled in the same habitat, with the aim to reveal some ecological and evolutionary aspects of amylase polymorphism, which has been studied extensively in D. subobscura, but not compared with other species in the group. The data obtained show that D. subobscura is distinct from the other three species regarding all biochemical amylase properties. Such a divergence also correlates with the niche breadth and relative abundance of these species in the same habitat.  相似文献   

16.
Probes specific to chromosome elements were used to investigate chromosome homologies between seven species of the Drosophila obscura group by in situ hybridization. Our results were in perfect agreement with the already established chromosome element homologies between D. subobscura, D. pseudoobscura, D. persimilis, and D. miranda. Furthermore, we were able to identify the chromosomal elements of D. obscura, D. ambigua, and D. subsilvestris. Of special interest was the localization of the two D. melanogaster-derived representatives of the tandemly repetitive genes, cDm500 and 12D8. In contrast to the findings with the element-specific probes, the localizations of the repetitive genes varied in the various species. Whereas D. melanogaster, D. subobscura, D. pseudoobscura, D. persimilis, and D. miranda showed only one strong block of label in the cross in situ hybridizations with cDm500, three labeling blocks were found on two elements for both D. ambigua and D. obscura. The two labeling blocks on one element occur in very close proximity, but are clearly separated in both species by cytologically detectable chromosomal material. We used the distribution of the cDm500 labeling sites to postulate a series of chromosomal rearrangements involved in the karyotype evolution of the analyzed species. Our results support the conclusion that the chromosomal elements retain their essential identity and that the observed gross structural rearrangements are due to fusions and paracentric or pericentric inversions. Cytologically obvious translocations were not recorded and are considered by us to be rare. The frequently occurring translocations of the tandemly repeated gene clusters observed in this study are probably due to a different mechanism, which may be an intrinsic property of this category of genes.This paper is dedicated to Prof. Hans Bauer on the occasion of his 80th birthday with our best wishes  相似文献   

17.
We have sequenced 4 kb of the genomic region comprising the Adh (Alcohol dehydrogenase) gene of Drosophila subobscura. In agreement with other species which belong to the same subgenus, two structural genes, Adh and Adh-dup, are contained in this region. The main features of these two genes of D. subobscura have been inferred from the sequence data and compared with the homologous region of D. ambigua and D. pseudoobscura. Drosophila subobscura Adh and Adh-dup differ from those of D. ambigua at a corrected estimation of 10.1% and 12.5%, respectively, while from those of D. pseudoobscura they differ by 9.5% and 8.1%, respectively. Our data suggest that Adh and Adh-dup are evolving independently, showing a species-specific pattern. Moreover, particular features of some regions of these genes make them valuable evolutionary hallmarks. For instance, replacement substitutions in the third exon of Adh may indicate the branching of the melanogaster-obscura groups, whereas replacement substitutions in the third exon of the Adh-dup could be used to assess speciation within the obscura group.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract. 1. The population densities of Drosophila obscura and D. subobscura in mixed deciduous woodland were investigated by multiple recapture techniques, marking flies with micronized fluorescent dusts.
2. Approximate densities per 100 m2 were as follows: September 1974: D.subobscura males 5, D.subobscura females 31. April 1975: D.obscura males 1, D.obscura females 2; D.subobscura males 0.3, D.subobscura females 1. June 1975: D.subobscura males 6, D.subobscura females 9.
3. Actual estimates have been compared using relative estimates derived from a reanalysis of Shorrocks's (1975) data.
4. Throughout most of the year D.subobscura was numerically dominant, rising to a peak of 750/100 m2 in the winter; but in late spring D.obscura was dominant, having reduced winter mortality by diapausing.
5. D.obscura 's density was comparable with those of its Nearctic relatives; D.subobscura 's was considerably higher.
6. The effects of previous workers' approximations on the estimation of population parameters have been examined, and possible theoretical consequences have been indicated.  相似文献   

19.
We compare the sequences for the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase II gene of 13 species of the Drosophila obscura group. The survey includes six members of the D. affinis subgroup, four of the D. pseudoobscura subgroup, and three of the D. obscura subgroup. In all species, the gene is 688 nucleotides in length, encoding a protein of 229 amino acids plus the first position T of the stop codon. The sequences show the typical high-transition bias for closely related species, but that bias is essentially eliminated for species pairs of > 5% sequence divergence. The phylogenetic relationships in the species group are inferred using both neighbor-joining and maximum parsimony. The two procedures give comparable results, showing that the D. affinis and D. pseudoobscura subgroups are monophyletic groupings that appear to have closer affinities to one another than either has to the D. obscura subgroup. We use transversion distances to estimate times of divergence, on the basis of three different estimates of the time of separation of the D. obscura species group from the D. melanogaster group. If that event occurred 35 Mya, then we can estimate the origin of the nearctic forms at approximately 22 Mya and the separation of the D. affinis and D. pseudoobscura subgroups at approximately 17 Mya.   相似文献   

20.
The highly repetitive satellite DNA family "ATOC180" is specific for the three closely related species Drosophila obscura, D. ambigua, and D. tristis but does not occur in their closest relatives D. subsilvestris and D. bifasciata. Approximately 10,000 copies/haploid genome of approximately 180-bp repetition units are tandemly arranged in the centromeric heterochromatin of all chromosomes of all three species. Molecular analysis of 29 cloned repeats shows much intra- and interspecific sequence homogeneity. Single nucleotide changes are the main source of variability and distinguish the sequence-, subfamily- and species-specific ATOC180 repeats from each other. Based on these nucleotide differences, phylogenetic dendrograms were constructed and compared with published trees for other traits. The data indicate that the sequences of the ATOC180 satellite DNA family probably arose in a phylogenetically "short period" during the anagenetic evolution of the common ancestor of D. obscura, D. tristis, and D. ambigua, as a consequence of a process of genome reorganization, followed by a "long period" of entirely gradual sequence evolution. For the latter period, an evolutionary rate of 3 x 10(-8) substitutions/site/year was calculated.   相似文献   

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