Abstract

The African pygmy mice (Mus, subgenus Nannomys) are a group of small-sized rodents that occur widely throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Chromosomal diversity within this group is extensive and numerous studies have shown the karyotype to be a useful taxonomic marker. This is pertinent to Mus minutoides populations in South Africa where two different cytotypes (2n = 34, 2n = 18) and a modification of the sex determination system (due to the presence of a Y chromosome in some females) have been recorded. This chromosomal diversity is mirrored by mitochondrial DNA sequences that unambiguously discriminate among the various pygmy mouse species and, importantly, the different M. minutoides cytotypes. However, the geographic delimitation and taxonomy of pygmy mice populations in South Africa is poorly understood. To address this, tissue samples of M. minutoides were taken and analysed from specimens housed in six South African museum collections. Partial cytochrome b sequences (400 pb) were successfully amplified from 44% of the 154 samples processed. Two species were identified: M. indutus and M. minutoides. The sequences of the M. indutus samples provided two unexpected features: i) nuclear copies of the cytochrome b gene were detected in many specimens, and ii) the range of this species was found to extend considerably further south than is presently understood. The phylogenetic analysis of the M. minutoides samples revealed two well-supported clades: a Southern clade which included the two chromosomal groups previously identified in South Africa, and an Eastern clade that extended from Eastern Africa into South Africa. Congruent molecular phylogenetic and chromosomal datasets permitted the tentative chromosomal assignments of museum specimens within the different clades as well as the correction of misidentified museum specimens.

Highlights

  • The African pygmy mice represent an early African offshoot of the Mus lineage and are characterized by their overall small size (,10 g)

  • Phylogenetic analyses highlighted the existence of at least three well-supported clades within M. minutoides: Western Africa, West-Central Africa and East/South Africa [3,7,8] and these intraspecific relationships are in agreement with an extensive chromosomal diversity

  • A small percentage (2%) of the extractions led to poor quality sequences that could not be used in the phylogenetic analysis

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Summary

Introduction

The African pygmy mice (subgenus Nannomys) represent an early African offshoot of the Mus lineage and are characterized by their overall small size (,10 g). The existence of XY females was first detected in South African specimens and subsequently confirmed in West African populations suggesting that the mutation likely occurred at the onset of the diversification of the lineage [11]. This species has undergone a remarkable karyotypic evolution that is paralleled by a high level of genetic structure making it a useful model for studying chromosomal evolution and speciation processes in general, and in small mammals in particular

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