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Animal Mitochondria, Positive Selection and Cyto-Nuclear Coevolution: Insights from Pulmonates

Pulmonate snails have remarkably high levels of mtDNA polymorphism within species and divergence between species, making them an interesting group for the study of mutation and selection on mitochondrial genomes. The availability of sequence data from most major lineages – collected largely for stud...

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Autores principales: Parmakelis, Aristeidis, Kotsakiozi, Panayiota, Rand, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3631144/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23620797
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061970
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author Parmakelis, Aristeidis
Kotsakiozi, Panayiota
Rand, David
author_facet Parmakelis, Aristeidis
Kotsakiozi, Panayiota
Rand, David
author_sort Parmakelis, Aristeidis
collection PubMed
description Pulmonate snails have remarkably high levels of mtDNA polymorphism within species and divergence between species, making them an interesting group for the study of mutation and selection on mitochondrial genomes. The availability of sequence data from most major lineages – collected largely for studies of phylogeography - provides an opportunity to perform several tests of selection that may provide general insights into the evolutionary forces that have produced this unusual pattern. Several protein coding mtDNA datasets of pulmonates were analyzed towards this direction. Two different methods for the detection of positive selection were used, one based on phylogeny, and the other on the McDonald-Kreitman test. The cyto-nuclear coevolution hypothesis, often implicated to account for the high levels of mtDNA divergence of some organisms, was also addressed by assessing the divergence pattern exhibited by a nuclear gene. The McDonald-Kreitman test indicated multiple signs of positive selection in the mtDNA genes, but was significantly biased when sequence divergence was high. The phylogenetic method identified five mtDNA datasets as affected by positive selection. In the nuclear gene, the McDonald-Kreitman test provided no significant results, whereas the phylogenetic method identified positive selection as likely present. Overall, our findings indicate that: 1) slim support for the cyto-nuclear coevolution hypothesis is present, 2) the elevated rates of mtDNA polymorphims and divergence in pulmonates do not appear to be due to pervasive positive selection, 3) more stringent tests show that spurious positive selection is uncovered when distant taxa are compared and 4) there are significant examples of positive selection acting in some cases, so it appears that mtDNA evolution in pulmonates can escape from strict deleterious evolution suggested by the Muller’s ratchet effect.
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spelling pubmed-36311442013-04-25 Animal Mitochondria, Positive Selection and Cyto-Nuclear Coevolution: Insights from Pulmonates Parmakelis, Aristeidis Kotsakiozi, Panayiota Rand, David PLoS One Research Article Pulmonate snails have remarkably high levels of mtDNA polymorphism within species and divergence between species, making them an interesting group for the study of mutation and selection on mitochondrial genomes. The availability of sequence data from most major lineages – collected largely for studies of phylogeography - provides an opportunity to perform several tests of selection that may provide general insights into the evolutionary forces that have produced this unusual pattern. Several protein coding mtDNA datasets of pulmonates were analyzed towards this direction. Two different methods for the detection of positive selection were used, one based on phylogeny, and the other on the McDonald-Kreitman test. The cyto-nuclear coevolution hypothesis, often implicated to account for the high levels of mtDNA divergence of some organisms, was also addressed by assessing the divergence pattern exhibited by a nuclear gene. The McDonald-Kreitman test indicated multiple signs of positive selection in the mtDNA genes, but was significantly biased when sequence divergence was high. The phylogenetic method identified five mtDNA datasets as affected by positive selection. In the nuclear gene, the McDonald-Kreitman test provided no significant results, whereas the phylogenetic method identified positive selection as likely present. Overall, our findings indicate that: 1) slim support for the cyto-nuclear coevolution hypothesis is present, 2) the elevated rates of mtDNA polymorphims and divergence in pulmonates do not appear to be due to pervasive positive selection, 3) more stringent tests show that spurious positive selection is uncovered when distant taxa are compared and 4) there are significant examples of positive selection acting in some cases, so it appears that mtDNA evolution in pulmonates can escape from strict deleterious evolution suggested by the Muller’s ratchet effect. Public Library of Science 2013-04-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3631144/ /pubmed/23620797 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061970 Text en © 2013 Parmakelis et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Parmakelis, Aristeidis
Kotsakiozi, Panayiota
Rand, David
Animal Mitochondria, Positive Selection and Cyto-Nuclear Coevolution: Insights from Pulmonates
title Animal Mitochondria, Positive Selection and Cyto-Nuclear Coevolution: Insights from Pulmonates
title_full Animal Mitochondria, Positive Selection and Cyto-Nuclear Coevolution: Insights from Pulmonates
title_fullStr Animal Mitochondria, Positive Selection and Cyto-Nuclear Coevolution: Insights from Pulmonates
title_full_unstemmed Animal Mitochondria, Positive Selection and Cyto-Nuclear Coevolution: Insights from Pulmonates
title_short Animal Mitochondria, Positive Selection and Cyto-Nuclear Coevolution: Insights from Pulmonates
title_sort animal mitochondria, positive selection and cyto-nuclear coevolution: insights from pulmonates
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3631144/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23620797
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061970
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