VLIZ
VLAAMS INSTITUUT VOOR DE ZEE
MARIEN EN KUSTGEBONDEN ONDERZOEK & BELEID IN VLAANDEREN
   
© VLIZ © VLIZ © VLIZ © VLIZ © VLIZ
 
 
  English  Sitemap  Print
U bent hier: VLIZ > datacentrum
menu1 Over het VLIZ menu2 Infoloket menu3 Zeebibliotheek menu4 Cijfers&Beleid menu5 Faciliteiten menu6 Datacentrum
   
Datacentrum
  - IMIS: Integrated Marine Information System -
log in

Personen | Instituten | Publicaties | Projecten | Datasets | Kaarten
meld een fout in dit recordmandje (0): toevoegen | tonen Print-vriendelijke versie

The adaptive role of phosphoglucomutase and other allozymes in a marine snail across the vertical rocky-shore gradientPeer reviewed article
Galindo, J.; Martínez-Fernández, M.; Suárez, P.; Móran, P.; San Juan, F.; Rolán-Alvarez, E. (2009). The adaptive role of phosphoglucomutase and other allozymes in a marine snail across the vertical rocky-shore gradient Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 98(1): 225-233
In: Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. Academic Press: London. ISSN 0024-4066, meer

Beschikbaar in Auteurs 

Trefwoorden
    Allozymes; Kinetica; Loci; Mariene weekdieren; Snails; Littorina saxatilis (Olivi, 1792) [Ruwe alikruik] [WoRMS]; Marien

Auteurs  Top 

Abstract
    Natural selection can play an important role in the maintenance of genetic polymorphisms, despite ongoing gene flow. In the present study, we use previously analysed allozymic loci and perform an FST outlier-based analysis to detect the signatures of divergent selection between sympatric ecotypes of the marine snail Littorina saxatilis at different localities. The results obtained show that different allozyme polymorphisms are affected (directly or indirectly) by selection at distinct geographical regions. The Phosmogluco mutase-2 locus was the best candidate for adaptation and further biochemical analyses were performed. The kinetic properties of the three more common genotypes of Pgm-2 were studied. The results obtained are concordant with two alternative hypotheses: (1) natural selection is acting directly on this locus or, more probably, (2) selection is affecting a genomic region tightly linked to the enzyme locus. In both cases, the known existence of a parallel and partially independent origin of these ecotypes would explain why different candidate loci were detected in different localities.

 Top | Auteurs 
 

 

Vlaams Instituut voor de Zee
InnovOcean site
Wandelaarkaai 7
B-8400 OOSTENDE, België
Tel: +32 [0]59/34 21 30
Fax: +32 [0]59/34 21 31
Email: info@vliz.be
   

 

Vlaamse Gemeenschap Provincie West-Vlaanderen