Northern Bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) Mitochondrial Population Genomics Reveals Structure, Divergence, and Evidence for Heteroplasmy

Herein, we evaluated the concordance of population inferences and conclusions resulting from the analysis of short mitochondrial fragments (i.e., partial or complete D-Loop nucleotide sequences) versus complete mitogenome sequences for 53 bobwhites representing six ecoregions across TX and OK (USA)....

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Published inPloS one Vol. 10; no. 12; p. e0144913
Main Authors Halley, Yvette A, Oldeschulte, David L, Bhattarai, Eric K, Hill, Joshua, Metz, Richard P, Johnson, Charles D, Presley, Steven M, Ruzicka, Rebekah E, Rollins, Dale, Peterson, Markus J, Murphy, William J, Seabury, Christopher M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 29.12.2015
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Summary:Herein, we evaluated the concordance of population inferences and conclusions resulting from the analysis of short mitochondrial fragments (i.e., partial or complete D-Loop nucleotide sequences) versus complete mitogenome sequences for 53 bobwhites representing six ecoregions across TX and OK (USA). Median joining (MJ) haplotype networks demonstrated that analyses performed using small mitochondrial fragments were insufficient for estimating the true (i.e., complete) mitogenome haplotype structure, corresponding levels of divergence, and maternal population history of our samples. Notably, discordant demographic inferences were observed when mismatch distributions of partial (i.e., partial D-Loop) versus complete mitogenome sequences were compared, with the reduction in mitochondrial genomic information content observed to encourage spurious inferences in our samples. A probabilistic approach to variant prediction for the complete bobwhite mitogenomes revealed 344 segregating sites corresponding to 347 total mutations, including 49 putative nonsynonymous single nucleotide variants (SNVs) distributed across 12 protein coding genes. Evidence of gross heteroplasmy was observed for 13 bobwhites, with 10 of the 13 heteroplasmies involving one moderate to high frequency SNV. Haplotype network and phylogenetic analyses for the complete bobwhite mitogenome sequences revealed two divergent maternal lineages (dXY = 0.00731; FST = 0.849; P < 0.05), thereby supporting the potential for two putative subspecies. However, the diverged lineage (n = 103 variants) almost exclusively involved bobwhites geographically classified as Colinus virginianus texanus, which is discordant with the expectations of previous geographic subspecies designations. Tests of adaptive evolution for functional divergence (MKT), frequency distribution tests (D, FS) and phylogenetic analyses (RAxML) provide no evidence for positive selection or hybridization with the sympatric scaled quail (Callipepla squamata) as being explanatory factors for the two bobwhite maternal lineages observed. Instead, our analyses support the supposition that two diverged maternal lineages have survived from pre-expansion to post-expansion population(s), with the segregation of some slightly deleterious nonsynonymous mutations.
Bibliography:Conceived and designed the experiments: CMS. Performed the experiments: YAH DLO EKB CMS. Analyzed the data: YAH DLO WJM CMS. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: SMP RER DR JH CDJ RPM. Wrote the paper: YAH CMS. Provided comments and suggestions for the manuscript: YAH DLO EKB JH RPM CDJ SMP RER DR MJP WJM. Assigned Geographic Subspecies Designations: MJP CMS. Managed Genomic Data: CMS YAH. Constructed Illumina Libraries and Performed Sequencing: JH RPM CDJ.
Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0144913