Abstract
DNA sequence variation in a 1410-bp region including the Cu,Zn Sod locus was examined in 41 homozygous lines of Drosophila melanogaster. Fourteen lines were from Barcelona, Spain, 25 were from California populations and the other two were from laboratory stocks. Two common electromorphs, SODS and SODF, are segregating in the populations. Our sample of 41 lines included 19 SodS and 22 SodF alleles (henceforward referred to as Slow and Fast alleles). All 19 Slow alleles were identical in sequence. Of the 22 Fast alleles sequenced, nine were identical in sequence and are referred to as the Fast A haplotypes. The Slow allele sequence differed from the Fast A haplotype at a single nucleotide site, the site that accounts for the amino acid difference between SODS and SODF. There were nine other haplotypes among the remaining 13 Fast alleles sequenced. The overall level of nucleotide diversity (pi) in this sample is not greatly different than that found at other loci in D. melanogaster. It is concluded that the Slow/Fast polymorphism is a recently arisen polymorphism, not an old balanced polymorphism. The large group of nearly identical haplotypes suggests that a recent mutation, at the Sod locus or tightly linked to it, has increased rapidly in frequency to around 50%, both in California and Spain. The application of a new statistical test demonstrates that the occurrence of such large numbers of haplotypes with so little variation among them is very unlikely under the usual equilibrium neutral model. We suggest that the high frequency of some haplotypes is due to natural selection at the Sod locus or at a tightly linked locus.
Highlights
MATERIALS AND METHODSSampling from localities:To estimate the frequency of the Slow and Fast alleles, large samplesof flieswere obtained from two California populations separated by 650 km, Culver City (Los Angeles County) and El Rio vineyard (Lockeford, San Joaquin County) andfrom Barcelona(FreixenetWinery), Spain
IN recent years, the Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD) enzyme has been the focus of a number of the Sod locus, or a closely linked locus, may be involved in aging in D. melanogaster
SodF) at the Sod locus
Summary
Sampling from localities:To estimate the frequency of the Slow and Fast alleles, large samplesof flieswere obtained from two California populations separated by 650 km, Culver City (Los Angeles County) and El Rio vineyard (Lockeford, San Joaquin County) andfrom Barcelona(FreixenetWinery), Spain. Small samples of Slow and Fast alleles were amplified, cloned and sequencedby the methods described below. The samples for DNA sequencing were non-random with respect to the Slow and Fast alleles. From Culver City 10 Slow alleles and 9 Fast alleles were sampled for sequencing. To construct a Culver City samplethat can be treated at least a p proximatelyas a random samplefor statisticalanalysis, wecombined the 9 sampled Fast alleles with two Slow alleles. This artificial sample hathse composition,in terms of Slowand Fast alleles, that would be most frequently observed in truly random samples from Culver City, given that the frequency of Slow isaround 18%.We refer to this sampleas the Culver City “constructedrandom sample”or, more briefly, the Culver City CRS We treat this CRS as a random sample in the statistical tests and for estimation purposes.
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