Native oak chloroplasts reveal an ancient divide across Europe
- 1 December 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Ecology
- Vol. 2 (6) , 337-343
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-294x.1993.tb00026.x
Abstract
Glacial refugia and postglacial migration are major factors responsible for the present patterns of genetic variation we see in natural populations. Traditionally postglacial history has been inferred from fossil data, but new molecular techniques permit historical information to be gleaned from present populations. The chloroplast tRNALeu1 intron contains regions which have been highly conserved over a billion years of chloroplast evolution. Surprisingly, in one of these regions which has remained invariant for all photosynthetic organisms so far studied, we have found intraspecific site polymorphism. This polymorphism occurs in two European oaks, Quercus robur and Q. petraea, indicating hybridisation and introgression between them. Two distinct chloroplast types occur and are distributed geographically as eastern and western forms suggesting that these oaks are each derived from at least two separate glacial refugia.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Universal primers for amplification of three non-coding regions of chloroplast DNAPlant Molecular Biology, 1991
- Bacterial Origin of a Chloroplast Intron: Conserved Self-Splicing Group I Introns in CyanobacteriaScience, 1990
- Adaptation, speciation and hybrid zonesNature, 1989
- The complete sequence of the rice (Oryza sativa) chloroplast genome: Intermolecular recombination between distinct tRNA genes accounts for a major plastid DNA inversion during the evolution of the cerealsMolecular Genetics and Genomics, 1989
- Conserved sequences and structures of group I introns: building an active site for RNA catalysis — a reviewGene, 1988
- Hybridization as a Dispersal MechanismEvolution, 1988
- Hybrid zones-natural laboratories for evolutionary studiesTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 1988
- Nucleotide sequence of the split tRNAleu(UAA) gene from Sorghum bicolor chloroplastsGene, 1986
- Making ends meet: a model for RNA splicing in fungal mitochondriaNature, 1982
- Comparison of fungal mitochondrial introns reveals extensive homologies in RNA secondary structureBiochimie, 1982