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Admixture in European Populus hybrid zones makes feasible the mapping of loci that contribute to reproductive isolation and trait differences
Author(s): Lexer C (Lexer, C.), Buerkle CA (Buerkle, C. A.), Joseph JA (Joseph, J. A.), Heinze B (Heinze, B.), Fay MF (Fay, M. F.)
Source: HEREDITY    Volume: 98    Issue: 2    Pages: 74-84    Published: FEB 2007  
Times Cited: 17     References: 54     
Abstract: The use of admixed human populations to scan the genome for chromosomal segments affecting complex phenotypic traits has proved a powerful analytical tool. However, its potential in other organisms has not yet been evaluated. Here, we use DNA microsatellites to assess the feasibility of this approach in hybrid zones between two members of the 'model tree' genus Populus: Populus alba (white poplar) and Populus tremula (European aspen). We analyzed samples of both species and a Central European hybrid zone (N = 544 chromosomes) for a genome-wide set of 19 polymorphic DNA microsatellites. Our results indicate that allele frequency differentials between the two species are substantial (mean delta = 0.619 +/- 0.067). Background linkage disequilibrium (LD) in samples of the parental gene pools is moderate and should respond to sampling schemes that minimize drift and account for rare alleles. LD in hybrids decays with increasing number of backcross generations as expected from theory and approaches background levels of the parental gene pools in advanced generation backcrosses. Introgression from P. tremula into P. alba varies strongly across marker loci. For several markers, alleles from P. tremula are slightly over-represented relative to neutral expectations, whereas a single locus exhibits evidence of selection against P. tremula genotypes. We interpret our results in terms of the potential for admixture mapping in these two ecologically divergent Populus species, and we validate a modified approach of studying genotypic clines in 'mosaic' hybrid zones.
Document Type: Article
Language: English
Reprint Address: Lexer, C (reprint author), Royal Bot Gardens, Jodrell Lab, Richmond TW9 3DS, Surrey England
Addresses:
1. Royal Bot Gardens, Jodrell Lab, Richmond TW9 3DS, Surrey England
2. Univ Wyoming, Dept Bot, Laramie, WY 82071 USA
3. Fed Res Ctr Forests, Dept Genet, Vienna, Austria
Publisher: NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, MACMILLAN BUILDING, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
Subject Category: Ecology; Evolutionary Biology; Genetics & Heredity
IDS Number: 129LD
ISSN: 0018-067X
DOI: 10.1038/sj.hdy.6800898
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