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High karyotypic variation in Orthemis Hagen, 1861 species, with insights about the neo-XY in Orthemisambinigra Calvert, 1909 (Libellulidae, Odonata)
The American dragonfly genus Orthemis Hagen, 1861 is mainly found in the Neotropical region. Seven of 28 taxonomically described species have been reported from Argentina. Chromosome studies performed on this genus showed a wide variation in chromosome number and a high frequency of the neoXY chromo...
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
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Pensoft Publishers
2021
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Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8580954/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34804379 http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/CompCytogen.v15.i4.68761 |
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author | Mola, Liliana M. Fourastié, María Florencia Agopian, Silvia Susana |
author_facet | Mola, Liliana M. Fourastié, María Florencia Agopian, Silvia Susana |
author_sort | Mola, Liliana M. |
collection | PubMed |
description | The American dragonfly genus Orthemis Hagen, 1861 is mainly found in the Neotropical region. Seven of 28 taxonomically described species have been reported from Argentina. Chromosome studies performed on this genus showed a wide variation in chromosome number and a high frequency of the neoXY chromosomal sex-determination system, although the sexual pair was not observed in all cases. This work analyzes the spermatogenesis of Orthemisdiscolor (Burmeister, 1839), O.nodiplaga Karsch, 1891 and O.ambinigra Calvert, 1909 in individuals from the provinces of Misiones and Buenos Aires, Argentina. Orthemisdiscolor has 2n=23, n=11+X and one larger bivalent. Orthemisnodiplaga exhibits the largest chromosome number of the order, 2n=41, n=20+X and small chromosomes. Orthemisambinigra shows a reduced complement, 2n=12, n=5+neo-XY, large-sized chromosomes, and a homomorphic sex bivalent. Fusions and fragmentations are the main evolutionary mechanisms in Odonata, as well as in other organisms with holokinetic chromosomes. Orthemisnodiplaga would have originated by nine autosomal fragmentations from the ancestral karyotype of the genus (2n=22A+X in males). We argue that the diploid number 23 in Orthemis has a secondary origin from the ancestral karyotype of family Libellulidae (2n=25). The complement of O.ambinigra would have arisen from five autosomal fusions and the insertion of the X chromosome into a fused autosome. C-banding and DAPI/CMA(3) staining allowed the identification of the sexual bivalent, which revealed the presence of constitutive heterochromatin. We propose that the chromosome with intermediate C-staining intensity and three medial heterochromatic regions corresponds to the neo-Y and that the neo-system of this species has an ancient evolutionary origin. Moreover, we discuss on the mechanisms involved in the karyotypic evolution of this genus, the characteristics of the neo sex-determining systems and the patterns of heterochromatin distribution, quantity and base pair richness. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8580954 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021 |
publisher | Pensoft Publishers |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-85809542021-11-19 High karyotypic variation in Orthemis Hagen, 1861 species, with insights about the neo-XY in Orthemisambinigra Calvert, 1909 (Libellulidae, Odonata) Mola, Liliana M. Fourastié, María Florencia Agopian, Silvia Susana Comp Cytogenet Research Article The American dragonfly genus Orthemis Hagen, 1861 is mainly found in the Neotropical region. Seven of 28 taxonomically described species have been reported from Argentina. Chromosome studies performed on this genus showed a wide variation in chromosome number and a high frequency of the neoXY chromosomal sex-determination system, although the sexual pair was not observed in all cases. This work analyzes the spermatogenesis of Orthemisdiscolor (Burmeister, 1839), O.nodiplaga Karsch, 1891 and O.ambinigra Calvert, 1909 in individuals from the provinces of Misiones and Buenos Aires, Argentina. Orthemisdiscolor has 2n=23, n=11+X and one larger bivalent. Orthemisnodiplaga exhibits the largest chromosome number of the order, 2n=41, n=20+X and small chromosomes. Orthemisambinigra shows a reduced complement, 2n=12, n=5+neo-XY, large-sized chromosomes, and a homomorphic sex bivalent. Fusions and fragmentations are the main evolutionary mechanisms in Odonata, as well as in other organisms with holokinetic chromosomes. Orthemisnodiplaga would have originated by nine autosomal fragmentations from the ancestral karyotype of the genus (2n=22A+X in males). We argue that the diploid number 23 in Orthemis has a secondary origin from the ancestral karyotype of family Libellulidae (2n=25). The complement of O.ambinigra would have arisen from five autosomal fusions and the insertion of the X chromosome into a fused autosome. C-banding and DAPI/CMA(3) staining allowed the identification of the sexual bivalent, which revealed the presence of constitutive heterochromatin. We propose that the chromosome with intermediate C-staining intensity and three medial heterochromatic regions corresponds to the neo-Y and that the neo-system of this species has an ancient evolutionary origin. Moreover, we discuss on the mechanisms involved in the karyotypic evolution of this genus, the characteristics of the neo sex-determining systems and the patterns of heterochromatin distribution, quantity and base pair richness. Pensoft Publishers 2021-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8580954/ /pubmed/34804379 http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/CompCytogen.v15.i4.68761 Text en Liliana M. Mola, María Florencia Fourastié, Silvia Susana Agopian https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. |
spellingShingle | Research Article Mola, Liliana M. Fourastié, María Florencia Agopian, Silvia Susana High karyotypic variation in Orthemis Hagen, 1861 species, with insights about the neo-XY in Orthemisambinigra Calvert, 1909 (Libellulidae, Odonata) |
title | High karyotypic variation in Orthemis Hagen, 1861 species, with insights about the neo-XY in Orthemisambinigra Calvert, 1909 (Libellulidae, Odonata) |
title_full | High karyotypic variation in Orthemis Hagen, 1861 species, with insights about the neo-XY in Orthemisambinigra Calvert, 1909 (Libellulidae, Odonata) |
title_fullStr | High karyotypic variation in Orthemis Hagen, 1861 species, with insights about the neo-XY in Orthemisambinigra Calvert, 1909 (Libellulidae, Odonata) |
title_full_unstemmed | High karyotypic variation in Orthemis Hagen, 1861 species, with insights about the neo-XY in Orthemisambinigra Calvert, 1909 (Libellulidae, Odonata) |
title_short | High karyotypic variation in Orthemis Hagen, 1861 species, with insights about the neo-XY in Orthemisambinigra Calvert, 1909 (Libellulidae, Odonata) |
title_sort | high karyotypic variation in orthemis hagen, 1861 species, with insights about the neo-xy in orthemisambinigra calvert, 1909 (libellulidae, odonata) |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8580954/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34804379 http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/CompCytogen.v15.i4.68761 |
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