Karyotype evolution in Rhinolophus bats (Rhinolophidae, Chiroptera) illuminated by cross-species chromosome painting and G-banding comparison

被引:0
作者
Xiuguang Mao
Wenhui Nie
Jinhuan Wang
Weiting Su
Lei Ao
Qing Feng
Yingxiang Wang
Marianne Volleth
Fengtang Yang
机构
[1] Kunming Institute of Zoology,Key Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Evolution
[2] Wellcome Trust Genome Campus,The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute
[3] Otto-von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg,Department of Human Genetics
[4] The Graduate School of the Chinese Academy of Sciences,undefined
来源
Chromosome Research | 2007年 / 15卷
关键词
Chiroptera; chromosome painting; reciprocal translocation; Rhinolophidae; Robertsonian; translocation;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Rhinolophus (Rhinolophidae) is the second most speciose genus in Chiroptera and has extensively diversified diploid chromosome numbers (from 2n = 28 to 62). In spite of many attempts to explore the karyotypic evolution of this genus, most studies have been based on conventional Giemsa staining rather than G-banding. Here we have made a whole set of chromosome-specific painting probes from flow-sorted chromosomes of Aselliscus stoliczkanus (Hipposideridae). These probes have been utilized to establish the first genome-wide homology maps among six Rhinolophus species with four different diploid chromosome numbers (2n = 36, 44, 58, and 62) and three species from other families: Rousettus leschenaulti (2n = 36, Pteropodidae), Hipposideros larvatus (2n = 32, Hipposideridae), and Myotis altarium (2n = 44, Vespertilionidae) by fluorescence in situ hybridization. To facilitate integration with published maps, human paints were also hybridized to A. stoliczkanus chromosomes. Our painting results substantiate the wide occurrence of whole-chromosome arm conservation in Rhinolophus bats and suggest that Robertsonian translocations of different combinations account for their karyotype differences. Parsimony analysis using chromosomal characters has provided some new insights into the Rhinolophus ancestral karyotype and phylogenetic relationships among these Rhinolophus species so far studied. In addition to Robertsonian translocations, our results suggest that whole-arm (reciprocal) translocations involving multiple non-homologous chromosomes as well could have been involved in the karyotypic evolution within Rhinolophus, in particular those bats with low and medium diploid numbers.
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页码:835 / 848
页数:13
相关论文
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