International study on Artemia. LXII. Genomic relationships between Artemia franciscana and A-persimilis, inferred from chromocentre numbers
G.
Gajardo, J.A. Beardmore, P. Sorgeloos-2001
Heredity,87 Part 2: 172-177
(from Current Contents)
Abstract :
Chromocentres, i.e. heavily stainable heterochromatic
areas with highly repetitive DNA (a 130-bp repeat in the order of 6 x 10(5)
Copies per haploid genome) observed in the resting nucleus, are a reliable
taxonomic trait and a good marker for speciation in Artemia. This chromosome
marker was evaluated in populations of two New World sibling species: A.
franciscana, from North, Central and South America, and A. persimilis from
Argentina. Artemia persimilis showed the characteristically low average
chromocentre numbers ( < 3) of the ancestral Mediterranean species,
whilst higher numbers (> 5) were seen in A. franciscana. The increase in
chromocentre numbers from A. persimilis to A. franciscana occurred in a
rather steady, continuous geographical pattern with an overlapping zone
between both species. A north-south steady latitudinal decline of
chomocentres was observed towards the equator in A. franciscana populations
from the northern hemisphere, whilst the trait increased from this point
towards southern latitudes with a population in Chilean Patagonia (below 52
°S) exhibiting the highest chromocentre frequency. Since chromocentres are
positively correlated with repetitive DNA content, differentiation between
the species through the amplification of heterochromatin or an increased DNA
content in A. franciscana (although this species has a lower diploid
chromosome number), might nevertheless reflect chromosomal reorganizations
between the species. Chromocentres, together with other traits, reveal a
probable hybrid zone between the two species in Chilean Patagonia.
(Univ Los Lagos, Lab Genet & Aquaculture, POB
933, Osorno, Chile, e-mail: ggajardo@ulagos.cl)