High chloroplast haplotype diversity in the endemic legume Oxytropis chankaensis may result from independent polyploidization events.

Artyukova E.V., Kozyrenko M.M., Kholina A.B., Zhuravlev Y.N.

В журнале Genetica

Год: 2011 Том: 139 Номер: 2 Страницы: 221–232

Oxytropis chankaensis Jurtz. (Fabaceae) is an endangered perennial tetraploid species endemic to the Khanka Lake coast. In Russia, O. chankaensis is distributed across a very restricted zone along the western shore of this lake. To characterise all known populations of this species, we assessed the genetic diversity of four noncoding regions of chloroplast DNA (cpDNA). Variable sites detected within the trnL-trnF, the petG-trnP, and the trnS-trnG regions allowed the identification of seven haplotypes. On the other hand, no variation was found in the trnH-psbA region. O. chankaensis exhibited an overall low level of nucleotide diversity (pi = 0.00052) but a marked haplotype diversity (h = 0.718). A combination of three or four haplotypes was found in each population, and most of the cpDNA variation (above 90%) was distributed within populations. The level of genetic structure that we detected in O. chankaensis using maternal plastid DNA markers was much lower (G (ST) = 0.037) than the average that is estimated for angiosperms. We found no evidence for isolation by distance or for phylogeographic structuring in O. chankaensis. Our data suggest that autopolyploidy has arisen more than once in the evolutionary history of this species. Repetitive expansion and contraction during past and ongoing demographic events both seem to be involved in shaping the current genetic structure of O. chankaensis. This study provides valuable information for developing the most appropriate strategy for conserving this endemic species with a narrow habitat range.

DOI 10.1007/s10709-010-9539-8

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