@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19415,
author = {Syou Kato and Kazuharu Misawa and Fumio Takahashi and Hidetoshi Sakayama and Satomi Sano and Keiko Kosuge and Fumie Kasai and Makoto Watanabe and Jiro Tanaka and Hisayoshi Nozaki},
title = {Intraspecific phylogeny of Chara braunii (Charales) based on chloroplast and nuclear DNA regions},
year = {2011},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Journal of Phycology},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Many of the genes that control photosynthesis are carried in the chloroplast. These genes differ among species. However, evidence has yet to be found revealing the involvement of organelle genes in the initial stages of plant speciation. To elucidate the molecular basis of aquatic plant speciation, we focused on the unique plant species Chara braunii that inhabits both shallow and deep freshwater habitats and exhibits habitat-based dimorphism of chloroplast DNA (cpDNA). Here, we examined the ?shallow? and ?deep? subpopulations of C. braunii using two nuclear DNA (nDNA) markers and cpDNA. Genetic differentiation between the two subpopulations was measured in both nDNA and cpDNA regions, although phylogenetic analyses suggested nuclear gene flow between subpopulations. Neutrality tests based on Tajima?s D demonstrated diversifying selection acting on organelle DNA regions. Furthermore, both ?shallow? and ?deep? haplotypes of cpDNA found in cultures originating from bottom soils of three deep environments suggested that migration of oospores (dormant zygotes) between the two habitats occurs irrespective of the complete habitat-based dimorphism of cpDNA from field-collected vegetative thalli. Therefore, the two subpopulations are highly selected by the their different aquatic habitats and show pre-zygotic isolation, which represents an initial process of speciation affected by ecologically based divergent selection of organelle genes.}
}
Citation for Study 11126
Citation title:
"Intraspecific phylogeny of Chara braunii (Charales) based on chloroplast and nuclear DNA regions".
Study name:
"Intraspecific phylogeny of Chara braunii (Charales) based on chloroplast and nuclear DNA regions".
This study is part of submission 11116
(Status: Published).
Citation
Kato S., Misawa K., Takahashi F., Sakayama H., Sano S., Kosuge K., Kasai F., Watanabe M., Tanaka J., & Nozaki H. 2011. Intraspecific phylogeny of Chara braunii (Charales) based on chloroplast and nuclear DNA regions. Journal of Phycology, .
Authors
-
Kato S.
(submitter)
+81-29-853-8812
-
Misawa K.
-
Takahashi F.
-
Sakayama H.
-
Sano S.
-
Kosuge K.
-
Kasai F.
-
Watanabe M.
-
Tanaka J.
-
Nozaki H.
Abstract
Many of the genes that control photosynthesis are carried in the chloroplast. These genes differ among species. However, evidence has yet to be found revealing the involvement of organelle genes in the initial stages of plant speciation. To elucidate the molecular basis of aquatic plant speciation, we focused on the unique plant species Chara braunii that inhabits both shallow and deep freshwater habitats and exhibits habitat-based dimorphism of chloroplast DNA (cpDNA). Here, we examined the ?shallow? and ?deep? subpopulations of C. braunii using two nuclear DNA (nDNA) markers and cpDNA. Genetic differentiation between the two subpopulations was measured in both nDNA and cpDNA regions, although phylogenetic analyses suggested nuclear gene flow between subpopulations. Neutrality tests based on Tajima?s D demonstrated diversifying selection acting on organelle DNA regions. Furthermore, both ?shallow? and ?deep? haplotypes of cpDNA found in cultures originating from bottom soils of three deep environments suggested that migration of oospores (dormant zygotes) between the two habitats occurs irrespective of the complete habitat-based dimorphism of cpDNA from field-collected vegetative thalli. Therefore, the two subpopulations are highly selected by the their different aquatic habitats and show pre-zygotic isolation, which represents an initial process of speciation affected by ecologically based divergent selection of organelle genes.
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S11126
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19415,
author = {Syou Kato and Kazuharu Misawa and Fumio Takahashi and Hidetoshi Sakayama and Satomi Sano and Keiko Kosuge and Fumie Kasai and Makoto Watanabe and Jiro Tanaka and Hisayoshi Nozaki},
title = {Intraspecific phylogeny of Chara braunii (Charales) based on chloroplast and nuclear DNA regions},
year = {2011},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Journal of Phycology},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Many of the genes that control photosynthesis are carried in the chloroplast. These genes differ among species. However, evidence has yet to be found revealing the involvement of organelle genes in the initial stages of plant speciation. To elucidate the molecular basis of aquatic plant speciation, we focused on the unique plant species Chara braunii that inhabits both shallow and deep freshwater habitats and exhibits habitat-based dimorphism of chloroplast DNA (cpDNA). Here, we examined the ?shallow? and ?deep? subpopulations of C. braunii using two nuclear DNA (nDNA) markers and cpDNA. Genetic differentiation between the two subpopulations was measured in both nDNA and cpDNA regions, although phylogenetic analyses suggested nuclear gene flow between subpopulations. Neutrality tests based on Tajima?s D demonstrated diversifying selection acting on organelle DNA regions. Furthermore, both ?shallow? and ?deep? haplotypes of cpDNA found in cultures originating from bottom soils of three deep environments suggested that migration of oospores (dormant zygotes) between the two habitats occurs irrespective of the complete habitat-based dimorphism of cpDNA from field-collected vegetative thalli. Therefore, the two subpopulations are highly selected by the their different aquatic habitats and show pre-zygotic isolation, which represents an initial process of speciation affected by ecologically based divergent selection of organelle genes.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 19415
AU - Kato,Syou
AU - Misawa,Kazuharu
AU - Takahashi,Fumio
AU - Sakayama,Hidetoshi
AU - Sano,Satomi
AU - Kosuge,Keiko
AU - Kasai,Fumie
AU - Watanabe,Makoto
AU - Tanaka,Jiro
AU - Nozaki,Hisayoshi
T1 - Intraspecific phylogeny of Chara braunii (Charales) based on chloroplast and nuclear DNA regions
PY - 2011
KW -
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Many of the genes that control photosynthesis are carried in the chloroplast. These genes differ among species. However, evidence has yet to be found revealing the involvement of organelle genes in the initial stages of plant speciation. To elucidate the molecular basis of aquatic plant speciation, we focused on the unique plant species Chara braunii that inhabits both shallow and deep freshwater habitats and exhibits habitat-based dimorphism of chloroplast DNA (cpDNA). Here, we examined the ?shallow? and ?deep? subpopulations of C. braunii using two nuclear DNA (nDNA) markers and cpDNA. Genetic differentiation between the two subpopulations was measured in both nDNA and cpDNA regions, although phylogenetic analyses suggested nuclear gene flow between subpopulations. Neutrality tests based on Tajima?s D demonstrated diversifying selection acting on organelle DNA regions. Furthermore, both ?shallow? and ?deep? haplotypes of cpDNA found in cultures originating from bottom soils of three deep environments suggested that migration of oospores (dormant zygotes) between the two habitats occurs irrespective of the complete habitat-based dimorphism of cpDNA from field-collected vegetative thalli. Therefore, the two subpopulations are highly selected by the their different aquatic habitats and show pre-zygotic isolation, which represents an initial process of speciation affected by ecologically based divergent selection of organelle genes.
L3 -
JF - Journal of Phycology
VL -
IS -
ER -