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1.
Heredity (Edinb) ; 83 (Pt 1): 71-8, 1999 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10447705

ABSTRACT

Several morphological races and subspecies have been described and later included within the terrestrial isopod species Porcellionides pruinosus. During our study of this species, we have worked on specimens from France, Greece, Tunisia and Reunion island. Laboratory crosses have revealed two separate groups of populations: French populations (four localities) in one group, and those from Tunisia, Reunion island and Greece in the other. French individuals were reproductively isolated from those of the other populations. We have undertaken a survey of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) polymorphism in these seven populations. We observed two groups of mitotypes corresponding to the two groups of populations. Interfertility experiments between populations and the mitochondrial genetic distances between mitotypes both suggest the presence of two different species, one in France and one in Greece, Tunisia and Reunion island. The two species harbour, respectively, two different Wolbachia lines. Another feature of the molecular genetic analysis was the apparent mitochondrial monomorphism in the French populations and the low variability in the other three populations. The result can be related to the possibility of Wolbachia-induced genetic hitchhiking in these populations.

2.
Genetics ; 152(4): 1669-77, 1999 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10430591

ABSTRACT

Two maternally inherited sex ratio distorters (SRD) impose female-biased sex ratios on the wood louse Armadillidium vulgare by feminizing putative males. These SRD are (i) an intracytoplasmic bacterium of the genus Wolbachia, and (ii) another non-Mendelian element of unknown nature: the f element. Mitochondrial DNA variation was investigated in A. vulgare field populations to trace the evolution of host-SRD relationships and to investigate the effect of SRD on host cytoplasmic polymorphism. The Wolbachia endosymbionts showed no polymorphism in their ITS2 sequence and were associated with two closely related mitochondrial types. This situation probably reflects a single infection event followed by a slight differentiation of mitochondria. There was no association between the f element and a given mitochondrial type, which may confirm the fact that this element can be partially paternally transmitted. The spreading of a maternally inherited SRD in a population should reduce the mitochondrial diversity by a hitchhiking process. In A. vulgare, however, a within-population mtDNA polymorphism was often found, because of the deficient spread of Wolbachia and the partial paternal inheritance of the f element. The analysis of molecular variance indicated that A. vulgare populations are genetically structured, but without isolation by distance.


Subject(s)
Crustacea/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Plasmids/genetics , Rickettsiaceae/genetics , Sex Ratio , Animals , Crustacea/microbiology , Crustacea/physiology , Female , France , Genetics, Population , Male
3.
Genetics ; 151(1): 203-10, 1999 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9872960

ABSTRACT

The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in animals is generally a circular molecule of approximately 15 kb, but there are many exceptions such as linear molecules and larger ones. RFLP studies indicated that the mtDNA in the terrestrial isopod Armadillidium vulgare varied from 20 to 42 kb. This variation depended on the restriction enzyme used, and on the restriction profile generated by a given enzyme. The DNA fragments had characteristic electrophoretic behaviors. Digestions with two endonucleases always generated fewer fragments than expected; denaturation of restriction profiles reduced the size of two bands by half; densitometry indicated that a number of small fragments were present in stoichiometry, which has approximately twice the expected concentration. Finally, hybridization to a 550-bp 16S rDNA probe often revealed two copies of this gene. These results cannot be due to the genetic rearrangements generally invoked to explain large mtDNA. We propose that the large A. vulgare mtDNA is produced by the tripling of a 14-kb monomer with a singular rearrangement: one monomer is linear and the other two form a circular dimer. Densitometry suggested that these two molecular structures were present in different proportions within a single individual. The absence of mutations within the dimers also suggests that replication occurs during the monomer phase.


Subject(s)
Crustacea/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial , Animals , DNA, Mitochondrial/ultrastructure , Female , Male , Microscopy, Electron , Nucleic Acid Denaturation , Nucleic Acid Hybridization , Restriction Mapping
4.
Genetica ; 92(1): 55-60, 1993.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8163156

ABSTRACT

Sex determination in Armadillidium vulgare may be under the control of two parasitic sex factors that reverse genetic males into functional neo-females. The first feminizing factor (F) is a Wolbachia and the other (f) is probably a sequence of the F bacterial DNA unstably integrated into the host genome. Both of these feminizing factors are mainly maternally transmitted. Here we investigate the mitochondrial DNA polymorphism of wild iso-female lineages harbouring either F or f. Among the four haplotypes present in the population, two were the f-harbouring lineages, while two were common to the F- and f-harbouring lineages. This result suggests that there has been an introgression of the f factor into lineages infected by F Wolbachia. Based on previous data, we propose two different ways to account for such introgression. Given the particular dynamics of feminizing factors (f-harbouring lineages increase in populations at the expense of F-harbouring lineages), such an introgression should prevent the replacement of F-linked mitochondrial types by f-linked mitochondrial types in wild populations.


Subject(s)
Crustacea/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Extrachromosomal Inheritance , Hermaphroditic Organisms , Polymorphism, Genetic , Rickettsiaceae/physiology , Sex Determination Analysis , Sex Determination Processes , Animals , Crustacea/microbiology , Female , Haplotypes , Male , Models, Genetic , Rickettsiaceae/isolation & purification , Sex Ratio , Symbiosis
5.
Gen Comp Endocrinol ; 50(1): 146-55, 1983 Apr.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6852520

ABSTRACT

In Sphaeroma serratum, the differentiation of the male external sexual characteristics, as a result of an androgenic gland implant, proceeds more easily in females in vitellogenesis than in immature females. On the contrary, the transformation of the gonads is quicker and more obvious in immature females than in mature ones. This transformation which leads, in all cases, to an inversion of the ovary to a functional testicle able to produce spermatozoa, always occurs without any differentiation of an androgenic gland, contrary to what can be observed with Oniscoïds. The details of the external sexual differentiation of the grafted females can be related to the functioning of a protocerebral neurosecretory center having, as in males, an androinhibitory effect on the androgenic gland implant; the activity of this center, which seems to correspond to the center secreting VIH, would be particularly high with immature females and would become very low--or nonexistent--in females in vitellogenesis.


Subject(s)
Androgens/physiology , Crustacea/physiology , Sexual Maturation , Animals , Endocrine Glands/transplantation , Female , Male , Ovary/anatomy & histology , Ovary/physiology , Oviducts/physiology , Ovum/physiology , Sex Characteristics , Testis/physiology
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