-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Two subspecies of the meadow grasshopper Chorthippus parallelus meet in a secondary hybrid zone in the Pyrenees. We have recently detected Wolbachia infection in this extensively studied species. C. p. parallelus (Cpp) and C. p. erythropus (Cpe) harbour bacteria from the B and F supergroups, but they differ noticeably in the incidence and type of infection present in their populations. We can distinguish different regional infection patterns that are associated with the distribution of pure and hybrid C. parallelus individuals. The northern pattern of low-level infection characterizes Cpp populations, whereas the southern pattern of high-level infection affects Cpe locations. These patterns converge in the hybrid zone and generate a third infection pattern featuring an extremely high degree of co-infection with the two Wolbachia types in hybrids. The distribution of Wolbachia among the studied populations encourages us to consider the possibility that this bacterium has a significant influence on the origin, maintenance and dynamics of this hybrid zone, given the reproductive alterations that are often associated with Wolbachia.
Heredity 10/2009; 104(2):174-84. · 4.60 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Whole-comparative genomic hybridization (W-CGH) has been used to exemplify a simple methodology which allows identifying and mapping whole genome differences for highly repetitive DNA sequences between two related species of unknown genomic background. The use of this technique to the species binomy Arcyptera fusca/Arcyptera tornosi has allowed the identification of different DNA families mainly concentrated within the para-/peri-centromeric and distal heterochromatic regions of different chromosomes, which are differentially expanded in both genomes. Additionally, W-CGH allowed chromosome mapping of particular euchromatic regions immersed in the chromosome arms which have been affected by processes of DNA amplification and losses. A molecular approach was also conducted to analyse satellite DNA families in these species. We have found three different families showing an unequal representation in both species. Two of these families showed a centromeric location (EcoRV-390CEN and Sau3A-419CEN), whereas the last one was located at distal heterochromatic regions (Sau3A-197TEL). As A. fusca is a widely distributed species represented in most European high mountains, whereas A. tornosi is an endemic species represented in the Iberian Peninsula, the differences and resemblances reported here offer a good basis to support a close evolutionary relationship between both of the actually isolated species. Finally, W-CGH allowed identification of an asynchronic pattern of heterochromatin condensation through early prophase (characteristic in both species) which is uncommon or probably has been poorly analysed within classical early condensing chromosome domains through meiosis. The congruence of the obtained cytological and molecular results is analysed in light of the ancestral genome relationship between both species.
Journal of Evolutionary Biology 02/2008; 21(1):352-61. · 3.28 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Wolbachia are cytoplasmic proteobacteria which induce severe modifications in the reproductive behaviour of their arthropod hosts. Although common in insects and terrestrial isopods, Wolbachia have seldom been found in other arthropod groups. Based on PCR amplification and DNA sequencing of Wolbachia 16S rDNA we report the first record of these endosymbiont bacteria in ostracods (Ostracoda), an exclusively aquatic crustacean group. The implications of this finding and the likely links between Wolbachia and ostracod reproductive life-history traits (parthenogenesis and sex-ratio distortion) are discussed.
Fundamental and Applied Limnology / Archiv für Hydrobiologie 06/2007; 169(3):217-221. · 1.14 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: A (TTAGG)n-specific telomeric DNA probe was hybridized to 11 orthopteroid insect genomes by fluorescence in situ hybridization. Nine different genera, mainly distributed within two evolutionary branches with male chromosome numbers 2n = 23 and 2n = 17 were included in the analysis. Telomere sequences yielded positive signals in every telomere and there was a considerable number of interstitial telomeric-like sequences, mainly located at the distal end of some, but not all, subterminal chromosome regions. One of the species, Pyrgomorpha conica, showed massive hybridization signals associated with constitutive heterochromatin. The results are discussed along two lines: (i) the chromosomal evolutionary trends within this group of insects and (ii) the putative role that ITs may play in a genome when they are considered telomere-derived, but not telomere-functional, DNA sequences.
Genome 09/2004; 47(4):757-63. · 1.65 Impact Factor