Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Sharakhova M. V., Antonio-Nkondjio C., Xia A., Ndo C., Awono-Ambene P., Simard Frédéric, Sharakhov I. V. (2011). Cytogenetic map for Anopheles nili : application for population genetics and comparative physical mapping. Infection Genetics and Evolution, 11 (4), p. 746-754. ISSN 1567-1348.

Titre du document
Cytogenetic map for Anopheles nili : application for population genetics and comparative physical mapping
Année de publication
2011
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000292254200008
Auteurs
Sharakhova M. V., Antonio-Nkondjio C., Xia A., Ndo C., Awono-Ambene P., Simard Frédéric, Sharakhov I. V.
Source
Infection Genetics and Evolution, 2011, 11 (4), p. 746-754 ISSN 1567-1348
Anopheles nili is one of the major malaria vectors in Africa with a wide geographic distribution. However, the taxonomic and population genetic studies on this species are scarce. New research tools are urgently needed to genetically characterize this important malaria vector. In this study, a high-resolution cytogenetic map was developed for An. nili polytene chromosomes. Chromosomes were straightened and subdivided into 46 numbered divisions according to the banding pattern. Population analysis of An. nili females collected in Burkina Faso revealed the presence of two highly polymorphic inversions on the 2R chromosomal arm. A statistically significant departure from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium due to a deficit in heterozygotes was detected for inversion 2Rb. To determine chromosome homologies and gene order conservation between An. nili and other major malaria vectors, PCR probes based on the An. gambiae coding sequences were mapped to An. nili chromosomes. Comparative mapping demonstrated that An. nili chromosomes have an An. stephensi-like arm association and that whole-arm translocations and paracentric inversions were the major types of rearrangement in evolution of these mosquitoes. The minimum number of fixed inversions among An. nili, An. gambiae, and An. stephensi was calculated using the Multiple Genome Rearrangements (MGR), Genome Rearrangements In Man and Mouse (GRIMM), and Sorting Permutation by Reversals and block-INterchanGes (SPRING) programs. The data suggest that the An. nili is, at least, as diverged from An. gambiae as An. stephensi. We provide evidence that 2La/a arrangement of An. gambiae is present in outgroup species An. nili and An. stephensi confirming the ancestral status of the 2La inversion in the An. gambiae complex. Availability of the new polytene chromosome map, polymorphic inversions, and physically mapped DNA markers for An. nili will further stimulate population genetic, taxonomic, and genomic studies of this neglected malaria vector.
Plan de classement
Entomologie médicale / Parasitologie / Virologie [052]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010053673]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010053673
Contact