Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16054
Title: Comparative cytogenetic analysis of some species of the Dendropsophus microcephalus group (Anura, Hylidae) in the light of phylogenetic inferences
Authors: Medeiros, Lilian Ricco
Louren?o, Luciana Bolsoni
Rossa-Feres, Denise de Cerqueira
Lima, Albertina Pimental
Andrade, Gilda Vasconcellos
Giaretta, Ariovaldo Ant?nio
Egito, Gabriel Toselli Barbosa Tabosa
Pimentel, Shirlei Maria Recco
Keywords: Dna, Mitochondrial
Rna 12s
Bayes Theorem
Chromosome Analysis
Chromosome Pairing
Comparative Study
Female
Geographical Variation (species)
Hylidae
Karyotype
Male
Microcephaly
Molecular Phylogeny
Monophyly
Nonhuman
Parsimony Analysis
Animal
Anura
Chromosomes
Karyotyping
Phylogeny
Anura
Hylidae
Nanus
Issue Date: 2013
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: BMC Genetics
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 14
Abstract: Background: Dendropsophus is a monophyletic anuran genus with a diploid number of 30 chromosomes as an important synapomorphy. However, the internal phylogenetic relationships of this genus are poorly understood. Interestingly, an intriguing interspecific variation in the telocentric chromosome number has been useful in species identification. To address certain uncertainties related to one of the species groups of Dendropsophus, the D. microcephalus group, we carried out a cytogenetic analysis combined with phylogenetic inferences based on mitochondrial sequences, which aimed to aid in the analysis of chromosomal characters. Populations of Dendropsophus nanus, Dendropsophus walfordi, Dendropsophus sanborni, Dendropsophus jimi and Dendropsophus elianeae, ranging from the extreme south to the north of Brazil, were cytogenetically compared. A mitochondrial region of the ribosomal 12S gene from these populations, as well as from 30 other species of Dendropsophus, was used for the phylogenetic inferences. Phylogenetic relationships were inferred using maximum parsimony and Bayesian analyses.Results: The species D. nanus and D. walfordi exhibited identical karyotypes (2n = 30; FN = 52), with four pairs of telocentric chromosomes and a NOR located on metacentric chromosome pair 13. In all of the phylogenetic hypotheses, the paraphyly of D. nanus and D. walfordi was inferred. D. sanborni from Botucatu-SP and Torres-RS showed the same karyotype as D. jimi, with 5 pairs of telocentric chromosomes (2n = 30; FN = 50) and a terminal NOR in the long arm of the telocentric chromosome pair 12. Despite their karyotypic similarity, these species were not found to compose a monophyletic group. Finally, the phylogenetic and cytogenetic analyses did not cluster the specimens of D. elianeae according to their geographical occurrence or recognized morphotypes.Conclusions: We suggest that a taxonomic revision of the taxa D. nanus and D. walfordi is quite necessary. We also observe that the number of telocentric chromosomes is useful to distinguish among valid species in some cases, although it is unchanged in species that are not necessarily closely related phylogenetically. Therefore, inferences based on this chromosomal character must be made with caution; a proper evolutionary analysis of the karyotypic variation in Dendropsophus depends on further characterization of the telocentric chromosomes found in this group. © 2013 Medeiros et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1186/1471-2156-14-59
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