Turner Thomas L, Hahn Matthew W, Nuzhdin Sergey V
Center for Population Biology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
PLoS Biol. 2005 Sep;3(9):e285. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0030285. Epub 2005 Aug 9.
The African malaria mosquito, Anopheles gambiae sensu stricto (A. gambiae), provides a unique opportunity to study the evolution of reproductive isolation because it is divided into two sympatric, partially isolated subtaxa known as M form and S form. With the annotated genome of this species now available, high-throughput techniques can be applied to locate and characterize the genomic regions contributing to reproductive isolation. In order to quantify patterns of differentiation within A. gambiae, we hybridized population samples of genomic DNA from each form to Affymetrix GeneChip microarrays. We found that three regions, together encompassing less than 2.8 Mb, are the only locations where the M and S forms are significantly differentiated. Two of these regions are adjacent to centromeres, on Chromosomes 2L and X, and contain 50 and 12 predicted genes, respectively. Sequenced loci in these regions contain fixed differences between forms and no shared polymorphisms, while no fixed differences were found at nearby control loci. The third region, on Chromosome 2R, contains only five predicted genes; fixed differences in this region were also verified by direct sequencing. These "speciation islands" remain differentiated despite considerable gene flow, and are therefore expected to contain the genes responsible for reproductive isolation. Much effort has recently been applied to locating the genes and genetic changes responsible for reproductive isolation between species. Though much can be inferred about speciation by studying taxa that have diverged for millions of years, studying differentiation between taxa that are in the early stages of isolation will lead to a clearer view of the number and size of regions involved in the genetics of speciation. Despite appreciable levels of gene flow between the M and S forms of A. gambiae, we were able to isolate three small regions of differentiation where genes responsible for ecological and behavioral isolation are likely to be located. We expect reproductive isolation to be due to changes at a small number of loci, as these regions together contain only 67 predicted genes. Concentrating future mapping experiments on these regions should reveal the genes responsible for reproductive isolation between forms.
非洲疟蚊冈比亚按蚊(Anopheles gambiae sensu stricto,简称A. gambiae)为研究生殖隔离的进化提供了一个独特的机会,因为它分为两个同域分布、部分隔离的亚类,即M型和S型。随着该物种注释基因组的问世,高通量技术可用于定位和表征导致生殖隔离的基因组区域。为了量化冈比亚按蚊内部的分化模式,我们将来自每种类型的基因组DNA群体样本与Affymetrix基因芯片微阵列进行杂交。我们发现,三个区域(总计不到2.8兆碱基对)是M型和S型之间显著分化的唯一位置。其中两个区域分别位于2L染色体和X染色体上,与着丝粒相邻,分别包含50个和12个预测基因。这些区域中的测序位点在不同类型之间存在固定差异,且没有共享多态性,而在附近的对照位点未发现固定差异。第三个区域位于2R染色体上,仅包含5个预测基因;该区域的固定差异也通过直接测序得到了验证。尽管存在大量基因流动,这些“物种形成岛”仍然保持分化,因此预计其中包含导致生殖隔离的基因。最近,人们付出了很多努力来定位导致物种间生殖隔离的基因和遗传变化。虽然通过研究已经分化了数百万年的分类群可以推断出很多关于物种形成的信息,但研究处于隔离早期阶段的分类群之间的分化将更清楚地了解参与物种形成遗传学的区域数量和大小。尽管冈比亚按蚊的M型和S型之间存在明显的基因流动水平,但我们能够分离出三个小的分化区域,负责生态和行为隔离的基因可能位于这些区域。我们预计生殖隔离是由少数基因座的变化引起的,因为这些区域总共只包含67个预测基因。将未来的定位实验集中在这些区域应该能够揭示导致不同类型之间生殖隔离的基因。