1. Phylogenetic Relationships Among East African Haplochromine Fish as Revealed by Short Interspersed Elements (SINEs).
- Author
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Terai, Yohey, Takezaki, Naoko, Mayer, Werner E., Tichy, Herbert, Takahata, Naoyuki, Klein, Jan, and Okada, Norihiro
- Subjects
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CICHLIDS , *FISHES , *GENOMICS , *DNA , *LAKES , *AQUATIC habitats - Abstract
Genomic DNA libraries were prepared from two endemic species of Lake Victoria haplochromine (cichlid) fish and used to isolate and characterize a set of short interspersed elements (SINEs). The distribution and sequences of the SINEs were used to infer phylogenetic relationships among East African haplochromines. The SINE-based classification divides the fish into four groups, which, in order of their divergence from a stem lineage, are the endemic Lake Tanganyika flock (group 1); fish of the nonendemic, monotypic, widely distributed genus Astatoreochromis (group 2); the endemic Lake Malawi flock (group 3); and group 4, which contains fish from widely dispersed East African localities including Lakes Victoria, Edward, George, Albert, and Rukwa, as well as many rivers. The group 4 haplochromines are characterized by a subset of polymorphic SINEs, each of which is present in some individuals and absent in others of the same population at a given locality, the same morphologically defined species, and the same mtDNA-defined haplogroup. SINE-defined group 4 contains six of the seven previously described mtDNA haplogroups. One of the polymorphic SINEs appears to be fixed in the endemic Lake Victoria flock; four others display the presence-or-absence polymorphism within the species of this flock. These findings have implications for the origin of Lake Victoria cichlids and for their founding population sizes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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