11 research outputs found

    Intron analyses reveal multiple calmodulin copies in Littorina

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    Intron three and the flanking exons of the calmodulin gene have been amplified, cloned and sequenced from 18 members of the gastropod genus Littorina. From the 48 sequences, at least five different gene copies have been identified and their functionality characterized using a strategy based upon the potential protein product predicted from flanking exon data. The functionality analyses suggest that four of the genes code for functional copies of calmodulin. All five copies have been identified across a wide range of littorinid species although not ubiquitously. Using this novel approach based on intron sequences, we have identified an unprecedented number of potential calmodulin copies in Littorina, exceeding that reported for any other invertebrate. This suggests a higher number of, and more ancient, gene duplications than previously detected in a single genus

    Evolution of the limpet Patella candei d鈥橭rbigny (Mollusca, Patellidae) in Atlantic archipelagos: human intervention and natural processes

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    The genetic and morphological structure of Patella candei in the Macaronesian Islands were studied by allozyme electrophoresis and multivariate analysis (canonical discriminant analysis), respectively. Sixteen enzymes, yielding 21 resolvable loci were analysed for all populations using the BIOSYS-1 program. A disjunct distribution of genetically similar populations from the Azores and Selvagens Islands (P.c. gomesii鈥揚.c. candei) was found, which showed two diagnostic loci with P.c. ordinaria from Madeira. Patella c. crenata from the Canaries showed an intermediate composition of 92%P.c. ordinaria and 8%P.c. gomesii鈥揚.c. candei. Hypotheses are presented to explain the evolution of the genetic and morphological structure of P.c. candei in the Macaronesian Islands, including the interaction of natural processes and human intervention. Patella c. candei is considered to represent the ancestral form. An extinction or near extinction event may have happened in Madeira after which P.c. ordinaria arose, carrying only a small part of the diversity of the original form, which evolved in isolation. The ancestral form, P.c. candei, was depleted by human extraction from high levels of the shore in the Azores and Canaries. Patella c. gomesii, from the Azores evolved by phyletic evolution, colonizing low levels of the shore, leaving only a relict population in the Selvagens Islands, that remained almost free of human exploitation. Patella c. crenata is a hybrid with a high degree of introgression to P.c. ordinaria, which is maintained by the forces of human extraction at high-tide levels and by intraspecific competition at low-tide levels

    Genetic heterogeneity in Algerian human populations

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    The demographic history of human populations in North Africa has been characterized by complex processes of admixture and isolation that have modeled its current gene pool. Diverse genetic ancestral components with different origins (autochthonous, European, Middle Eastern, and sub-Saharan) and genetic heterogeneity in the region have been described. In this complex genetic landscape, Algeria, the largest country in Africa, has been poorly covered, with most of the studies using a single Algerian sample. In order to evaluate the genetic heterogeneity of Algeria, Y-chromosome, mtDNA and autosomal genome-wide makers have been analyzed in several Berber- and Arab-speaking groups. Our results show that the genetic heterogeneity found in Algeria is not correlated with geography or linguistics, challenging the idea of Berber groups being genetically isolated and Arab groups open to gene flow. In addition, we have found that external sources of gene flow into North Africa have been carried more often by females than males, while the North African autochthonous component is more frequent in paternally transmitted genome regions. Our results highlight the different demographic history revealed by different markers and urge to be cautious when deriving general conclusions from partial genomic information or from single samples as representatives of the total population of a region.This study was supported by the Ministerio de Econom铆a y Competitividad grant CGL2013-44351-P and by Direcci贸 General de Recerca, Generalitat de Catalunya grant 2014SGR866
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