生物
鼩鼱属
核型
蛛属
染色体
属
着丝粒
遗传学
动物
进化生物学
基因
作者
Larisa S. Biltueva,N.V. Vorobieva,Polina L. Perelman,Vladimir A. Trifonov,V. Volobouev,Victor V. Panov,V. B. Ilyashenko,S. S. Onischenko,Patricia C. O’Brien,Fengtang Yang,M.A. Ferguson‐Smith,Alexander S. Graphodatsky
摘要
The genus <i>Sorex</i> is one of the most successful genera of Eulipotyphla. Species of this genus are characterized by a striking chromosome variability including XY1Y2 sex chromosome systems and exceptional chromosomal polymorphisms within and between populations. To study chromosomal evolution of the genus in detail, we performed cross-species chromosome painting of 7 <i>Sorex </i>species with <i>S. granarius</i> and <i>S. araneus</i> whole-chromosome probes and found that the tundra shrew <i>S. tundrensis</i> has the most rearranged karyotype among these. We reconstructed robust phylogeny of the genus <i>Sorex</i> based on revealed conserved chromosomal segments and syntenic associations. About 16 rearrangements led to formation of 2 major Palearctic groups after their divergence from the common ancestor: the<i> S. araneus</i> group (10 fusions and 1 fission) and the <i>S. minutus</i> group (5 fusions). Further chromosomal evolution of the 12 species inside the groups, including 5 previously investigated species, was accompanied by multiple reshuffling events: 39 fusions, 20 centromere shifts and 10 fissions. The rate of chromosomal exchanges upon formation of the genus was close to the average rate for eutherians, but increased during recent (about 6–3 million years ago) speciation within <i>Sorex</i>. We propose that a plausible ancestral <i>Sorex</i> karyotype consists of 56 elements. It underwent 20 chromosome rearrangements from the boreoeutherian ancestor, with 14 chromosomes retaining the conserved state. The set of genus-specific chromosome signatures was drawn from the human (HSA)-shrew comparative map (HSA3/12/22, 8/19/3/21, 2/13, 3/18, 11/17, 12/15 and 1/12/22). The syntenic association HSA4/20, that was previously proposed as a common trait of all Eulipotyphla species, is shown here to be an apomorphic trait of <i>S. araneus</i>.
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