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Article Dans Une Revue Insect Molecular Biology Année : 2012

Long microsatellites and unusually high levels of genetic diversity in the Orthoptera

Résumé

Much remains to be learned about the mutational processes governing the evolution of microsatellite repeat regions and the associated levels of genetic diversity observed at microsatellite markers across populations or species. An extensive survey of microsatellite variation in 210 insect species from six major orders revealed that within Orthopterans, which are characterized by giant genomes, levels of genetic diversity were similar to 20% higher and microsatellite repeat arrays were longer than in any other group. Because of the mutation dependence on repeat length, this result suggests a higher microsatellite loci mutation rate in the Orthoptera. We deem it plausible that differences among insect orders, either in mismatch repair systems or in abundance of transposable element-derived microsatellites, can shape the size distribution of both genomes and microsatellite repeat regions. Our findings emphasise that observed levels of genetic diversity can greatly vary across species (orders at least) because of molecular differences in the mechanisms that determine microsatellite size, and are therefore critical to conservation and population genetics studies, where microsatellite repeat variability is primarily interpreted in terms of population demography and history.

Dates et versions

hal-02652636 , version 1 (29-05-2020)

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Marie Pierre Chapuis, Rejane R. Streiff, Gregory A. Sword. Long microsatellites and unusually high levels of genetic diversity in the Orthoptera. Insect Molecular Biology, 2012, 21 (2), pp.181-186. ⟨10.1111/j.1365-2583.2011.01124.x⟩. ⟨hal-02652636⟩
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