Dear all,

I'm happy to post the replies I got to my question about mt-tRNAs as
markers for population genetics.

Thanks to all for your help!

Chiara Papetti

chiara.papetti@unipd.it

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My original question:

Has anyone ever used mitochondrial tRNA sequences to investigate
population differentiation or species delimitation?

I have some tRNA sequences resulting from the sequencing of a
mitochondrial gene and I was wondering if they could be informative in
terms of population structure and species difference. What strategies
and methods have worked (or not) in your experience?

Replies I got:

I do not think that mtDNA is very wise for population genetics analyses,
for different good reasons:

Bazin, E., Glemin, S., Galtier, N., 2006. Population size does not
influence mitochondrial genetic diversity in animals. Science 312, 570-572.

Galtier, N., Jobson, R.W., Nabholz, B., GlÃ©min, S., Blier, P.U., 2009.

Mitochondrial whims: metabolic rate, longevity and the rate of molecular
evolution. Biol. Let. 5, 413-416.

Gerber, A.S., Loggins, R., Kumar, S., Dowling, T.E., 2001. Does
nonneutral evolution shape observed patterns of DNA variation in animal
mitochondrial genomes? Annu. Rev. Genet. 35, 539-566.

Papadopoulou, A., Anastasiou, I., Vogler, A.P., 2010. Revisiting the
insect mitochondrial molecular clock: the mid-Aegean trench calibration.
Mol. Biol. Evol. 27, 1659'1672.

Microsatellite markers will be much more informative and accurate

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Mitochondrial tRNAs tend to be highly conserved within species and
between closely related species (they're less variable than
mitochondrial protein-coding genes, for example), but you might get
lucky and find a few variable sites that could be informative.

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To my knowledge the mitochondrial tRNA are not showing polymorphism. I
sequenced one tRNA between COI and COII for hundreds of individuals and
did not find any polymorphism in this region.
If you find some, I will be interested by this.

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One suggested reference:

Stauffer C. A molecular method for differentiating sibling species
within the genus /Ips/. In: Gregoire J.C, Liebhold A.M, Stephen F.M, Day
K.R, Salom S.M, editors. Proceedings: integrating cultural tactics into
the management of bark beetle and reforestation pests. USDA Forest
Service General Technical Report NE-237. USDA North East Research
station; Syracuse, NY: 1997

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In my opinion, you should use your tRNA sequences just like any other
(haploid) marker, preferably keeping it attached to the neighboring
mitochondrial gene you were targeting for sequencing (since these
markers are linked, it makes no sense to analyze them separately). See
Fontaneto et al. (2015) Guidelines for DNA taxonomy, with a focus on the
meiofauna. Marine Biodiversity, 45:433'451 (https://doi.org/10%2Ff7sds6)
for a review of the different approaches you could use for species
delimitation.

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tRNAs and tRNA "pseudogenes" can be very useful, as different regions
are subjected to very different selection pressures. So, when using
them, you should make very thorough investigations of the sequence
blocks you end up using and the secondary structures. Check out my paper
on myctophid Met tRNAs genes and their duplicates - a trait of
myctophids in particular. They proved rather useful for phylogeny and
species delimitation. Ref: Poulsen JY, Byrkjedal I, Willassen E, et al.
Mitogenomic sequences and evidence from unique gene rearrangements
corroborate evolutionary relationships of myctophiformes (Neoteleostei).
/BMC Evol Biol/. 2013;13:111. Published 2013 Jun 3.
doi:10.1186/1471-2148-13-111

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I used chloroplast DNA for population genetic and phylogenetic studies
in horsetails (genus /Equisetum/).

In these species, intra-population polymorphism seems very small, likely
the consequence of clonal reproduction. For phylogenetic purpose, I was
able to use intergenic non coding chloroplast DNA sequences which gave
good results.  See attached papers. The primers used for chloroplast DNA
amplification are often anchored within the tRNA genes, because these
sequences are quite conserved.

You will find some sequences of tRNA genes in this paper :

Des Marais DL, Smith AR, Britton DM, Pryer KM (2003) Phylogenetic
relationships and evolution of extant horsetails,  Equisetum, based on
chloroplast DNA sequence data (rbcL  and  trnL-F). Int J Plant Sci 164:737'751

You will also find interesting literature about chloroplast DNA
variations and their use for population genetic studies in trees in late
90's papers by Remy J Petit at Bordeaux, France :

https://www6.bordeaux-aquitaine.inra.fr/biogeco/Personnel/Annuaire/M-P/Petit-Remy/Liste-complete

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Chiara UniPD <chiara.papetti@unipd.it>

