2016
DOI: 10.1111/2041-210x.12698
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Potentially adaptive mitochondrial haplotypes as a tool to identify divergent nuclear loci

Abstract: Summary Genetic tools are commonly used for conservation and management of at‐risk species. Individuals are often sampled from mixtures that are composed of many populations, which creates a need to assign individuals to their source. This can be problematic when the genetic divergence among source populations is weak but can be improved using adaptive genetic loci, which should show stronger levels of divergence. We previously reported a signature of positive selection in the mitochondrial‐encoded ND5 subun… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 68 publications
(123 reference statements)
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“…Although mechanisms underlying interactions are unclear, our protein modelling predicts that the amino acid changes in ND2 and ND5 may interact with the residues of nuclear coded subunits NDUFA10 and CYC1 respectively, which might be associated with reduced complex I assembly and activity, and be responsible for the mitonuclear interactions in SBPH. In support of this result, ND2/ND10 subunits were found to be part of mitonuclear co‐evolution in salmonids (Garvin et al, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 71%
“…Although mechanisms underlying interactions are unclear, our protein modelling predicts that the amino acid changes in ND2 and ND5 may interact with the residues of nuclear coded subunits NDUFA10 and CYC1 respectively, which might be associated with reduced complex I assembly and activity, and be responsible for the mitonuclear interactions in SBPH. In support of this result, ND2/ND10 subunits were found to be part of mitonuclear co‐evolution in salmonids (Garvin et al, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 71%
“…The fact that, within Montenegrina , several amino acid changes in the COI protein were deduced from the DNA data set is in contrast with a single variable site found in the genus Alopia (Fehér et al., 2013). Nonetheless, it remains speculative whether these replacements are conserved in a clade‐specific manner due to episodes of positive selection, as has been shown for several animals and various mt genes (Garvin, Bielawski, Sazanov, & Gharrett, 2015; Garvin et al., 2017; Slimen, Allio, & Jacques, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such approaches have inferred climate‐driven positive selection in mitochondrial‐encoded Complex I components in a range of animal taxa (Finch et al ., ; Garvin et al ., ; Caballero et al ., ). Structural mapping has also recently provided evidence of epistatic interactions between mitochondrial‐encoded and nuclear‐encoded Complex I variants potentially under climate‐driven selection (Garvin et al ., ; Morales et al ., ). As we have noted, mitonuclear incompatibilities need not involve direct interactions within multi‐subunit complexes (Innocenti et al ., ; Baris et al ., ).…”
Section: Implications and Outlookmentioning
confidence: 98%