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Evolutionary factors affecting the cross-species utility of newly developed microsatellite markers in seabirds.

Authors :
Moodley, Yoshan
Masello, Juan F.
Cole, Theresa L.
Calderon, Luciano
Munimanda, Gopi K.
Thali, Marco R.
Alderman, Rachael
Cuthbert, Richard J.
Marin, Manuel
Massaro, Melanie
Navarro, Joan
Phillips, Richard A.
Ryan, Peter G.
Suazo, Cristián G.
Cherel, Yves
Weimerskirch, Henri
Quillfeldt, Petra
Source :
Molecular Ecology Resources. Sep2015, Vol. 15 Issue 5, p1046-1058. 13p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Microsatellite loci are ideal for testing hypotheses relating to genetic segregation at fine spatio-temporal scales. They are also conserved among closely related species, making them potentially useful for clarifying interspecific relationships between recently diverged taxa. However, mutations at primer binding sites may lead to increased nonamplification, or disruptions that may result in decreased polymorphism in nontarget species. Furthermore, high mutation rates and constraints on allele size may also with evolutionary time, promote an increase in convergently evolved allele size classes, biasing measures of interspecific genetic differentiation. Here, we used next-generation sequencing to develop microsatellite markers from a shotgun genome sequence of the sub-Antarctic seabird, the thin-billed prion ( Pachyptila belcheri), that we tested for cross-species amplification in other Pachyptila and related sub-Antarctic species. We found that heterozygosity decreased and the proportion of nonamplifying loci increased with phylogenetic distance from the target species. Surprisingly, we found that species trees estimated from interspecific FST provided better approximations of mt DNA relationships among the studied species than those estimated using DC, even though FST was more affected by null alleles. We observed a significantly nonlinear second order polynomial relationship between microsatellite and mt DNA distances. We propose that the loss of linearity with increasing mt DNA distance stems from an increasing proportion of homoplastic allele size classes that are identical in state, but not identical by descent. Therefore, despite high cross-species amplification success and high polymorphism among the closely related Pachyptila species, we caution against the use of microsatellites in phylogenetic inference among distantly related taxa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1755098X
Volume :
15
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Molecular Ecology Resources
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
108814081
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.12372