Can the spread of agriculture in Europe be followed by tracing the spread of the weed Silene latifolia. A RAPD study

On the basis of gene frequency data of three flavone glycosylating genes, populations of the agricultural weed Silene latifolia (Caryophyllaceae) in Europe can be divided into two chemical races: an eastern and a western race. Morphological data also show a clear east-west division. When the two dat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Theoretical and applied genetics 1996-06, Vol.92 (8), p.1085-1090
Hauptverfasser: Vellekoop, P, Buntjer, J.B, Maas, J.W, Brederode, J. van (Utrecht Univ. (Netherlands). Dept. of Plant Ecology and Evolutionary. Biology section. Genome Evolution)
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container_end_page 1090
container_issue 8
container_start_page 1085
container_title Theoretical and applied genetics
container_volume 92
creator Vellekoop, P
Buntjer, J.B
Maas, J.W
Brederode, J. van (Utrecht Univ. (Netherlands). Dept. of Plant Ecology and Evolutionary. Biology section. Genome Evolution)
description On the basis of gene frequency data of three flavone glycosylating genes, populations of the agricultural weed Silene latifolia (Caryophyllaceae) in Europe can be divided into two chemical races: an eastern and a western race. Morphological data also show a clear east-west division. When the two datasets are combined at least nine different geographical races can be distinguished using cluster analysis. Because these observations are hard to explain by selection, it has been proposed that these different races probably originated as a consequence of migration during the spread of agriculture over Europe in the past. To discriminate between selection and genetic drift many more selectively neutral easy-to-score characters are needed. In order to test whether random amplified polymorphic DNAs (RAPDs) might be suitable for this purpose, we performed a small-scale RAPD analysis on 16 geographical different populations. Using Jaccard's coefficient of similarity, we calculated genetic distances by pair-wise comparisons of both unique and shared amplification products, and a dendrogram was subsequently constructed using an unweighted pair-group method with arithmetical averages (UPGMA). On the basis of the dendrogram two clusters were discerned that clearly coincide with the aforementioned east-west division in populations. As there has been little or no artificial selection on this weed, its migration routes may be a good reflection of the different geographical routes agriculture has taken. We propose that a phylogenetic analysis of RAPD data of many more populations may provide additional information on the spread of agriculture over Europe.
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Because these observations are hard to explain by selection, it has been proposed that these different races probably originated as a consequence of migration during the spread of agriculture over Europe in the past. To discriminate between selection and genetic drift many more selectively neutral easy-to-score characters are needed. In order to test whether random amplified polymorphic DNAs (RAPDs) might be suitable for this purpose, we performed a small-scale RAPD analysis on 16 geographical different populations. Using Jaccard's coefficient of similarity, we calculated genetic distances by pair-wise comparisons of both unique and shared amplification products, and a dendrogram was subsequently constructed using an unweighted pair-group method with arithmetical averages (UPGMA). On the basis of the dendrogram two clusters were discerned that clearly coincide with the aforementioned east-west division in populations. 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subjects AGRICULTURA
AGRICULTURE
Biological and medical sciences
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
GENETIC POLYMORPHISM
Genetics of eukaryotes. Biological and molecular evolution
HISTOIRE
HISTORIA
HISTORY
POLIMORFISMO GENETICO
POLYMORPHISME GENETIQUE
Population genetics, reproduction patterns
Pteridophyta, spermatophyta
SILENE
Vegetals
title Can the spread of agriculture in Europe be followed by tracing the spread of the weed Silene latifolia. A RAPD study
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