Origin and radiation of the house mouse: mitochondrial DNA phylogeny

Boursot, P. ; Din, W. ; Anand, R. ; Darviche, D. ; Dod, B. ; Von Deimling, F. ; Talwar, G. P. ; Bonhomme, F. (1996) Origin and radiation of the house mouse: mitochondrial DNA phylogeny Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 9 (4). pp. 391-415. ISSN 1010-061X

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Official URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1420-...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1420-9101.1996.9040391.x

Abstract

On the basis of patterns of allele frequency variation in nuclear genes (Din et al., in press) it has been proposed that the house mouse M. musculus originated in the northern Indian subcontinent, from where it radiated in several directions to form the well-described peripheral subspecies (M. m. domesticus, M. m. musculus and M. m. castaneus). Here we use a mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) phylogeny to test this hypothesis and to analyse the historical and demographic events that have accompanied this differentiation. This marker also provides a powerful means to check for genetic continuity between the central and peripheral populations. We studied restriction site polymorphism of samples from India and the Middle East as well as samples from the rest of Eurasia and northern Africa. M. m. domesticus and M. m. musculus are both monophyletic for mtDNA and belong to the subspecies-specific mtDNA lineages that have been described previously. Average nucleotide diversity is low in M. m. musculus (0.2-5%). It is not only higher in M. m. domesticus (0.7-0.9%) but the distribution of pairwise divergence is wider, and the rate of evolution in this branch appears to be higher than in M. m. musculus. The nucleotide diversity found in M. m. castaneus (0.4%) is due to the existence of two rather divergent linages with little intralineage variation. These two lineages are part of a diversified bush of the phylogenetic tree that also comprises several previously undescribed branches and includes all samples from the northern Indian subcontinent and Iran. The degree of diversity found in each of the samples from this region is high (1.2-2.4%) although they come from small geographic areas. This agrees well with the idea that the origin of the radiation was in the northern Indian subcontinent. However, as neither haplotypes on the M. m. domesticus nor on the M. m. musculus branches were found in this region, there appear to be important phylogeographic discontinuities between this central region and these peripherial subspecies. On the basis of the present result and the nuclear data (Din et al., in press), we propose that M. musculus originated in the north of the indian subcontinent. Our calibration of the evolutionary rate of mtDNA in mice suggests that the mouse settlement in this region could be as old as 900 000 years. Possibly from there, a first radiation could have reach the Middle East and the Caspian Sea, where the M. m. domesticus and M. m. musculus lineages, respectively, would have started to differentiate a few hundred thousand years ago, and from where they could have colonised the peripheral part of their ranges only recently.M. m. castaneus appears from its mtDNA to be recent offshoot of the northern Indian population. This multiple and gradual radiation ultimately led to recent peripheral secondary contacts, such as the well-known European hybrid zone.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to John Wiley and Sons.
Keywords:Mus musculus; Mitochondrial DNA; Radiation; Phylogeography
ID Code:50548
Deposited On:26 Jul 2011 13:10
Last Modified:26 Jul 2011 13:10

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