Molecular phylogeny of wood and field mice of the genus Apodemus (Muridae, Rodentia) based on the restriction analysis of total nuclear DNA

Chelomina G.N.

В журнале Russian Journal of Genetics

Год: 1998 Том: 34 Страницы: 1084-1089

Based on restriction-fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of total nuclear DNA (nDNA), analyses of phylogenetic relations and genetic similarity were performed in nine species of wood and field mice of the genus Apodemus. Genetic distances calculated for different species pairs ranged from 0.24 to 12.53%; i.e., the maximum differences were 50-fold. The estimated evolutionary age of the genus Apodemus is approximately 12 million years. In general, the obtained data on genetic similarity and phylogenetic relationship allow us to differentiate at least three groups of species: (1) southern Paleoarctic (A. argenteus), (2) eastern (A. peninsulae, A. speciosus, and A, agrarius), and (3) western (A. sylvaticus, A. flavicollis, A. ponticus, A. uralensis, and A. fulvipectus) ones. The latter two groups are related to the northern Paleoarctic. Such a division into groups corresponds to characteristic features of karyotype organization and segmentation of satellite DNA (satDNA) of these species, as well as the nature of variation in isozymes and in a fragment of the enzyme-encoding sequence of cytochrome b gene isolated from the mitochondrial genome. Species groups (1) and (3) exhibited a high probability of a monophyletic origin (70 and 99%, respectively). Group (2) is unlikely to be monophyletic, and the genetic distances in it are significantly greater than those in group 3. A. argenteus is the most diverged, both phenogenetically and phylogenetically. The data are consistent with a new zoological classification, which assumes the division of the unified genus Apodemus into two taxa of generic rank and suggests that the southern Paleoarctic wood mouse should be regarded as a separate taxon of at least subgeneric rank.