Abstract

Water frogs of the genus Pelophylax (previous Rana) species have been much studied in Europe for their outstanding reproductive mechanism in which sympatric hybridization between genetically distinct parental species produces diverse genetic forms of viable hybrid animals. The most common hybrid is P.esculentus that carries the genomes of both parental species, P.ridibundus and P.lessonae, but usually transfers the whole genome of only one parent to its offsprings (hybridogenesis). The evolutionary cost of transfer of the intact genome and hence the hemiclonal reproduction is the depletion of heterozygosity in the hybrid populations. Pelophylax esculentus presents an excellent example of the long-term sustained hybridization and hemiclonal reproduction in which the effects of the low genetic diversity are balanced through the novel mutations and periodic recombinations. In this study, we analyzed the mitochondrial (mt) and microsatellites DNA variations in hybrid Pelophylax populations from southern parts of the Pannonian Basin and a north-south transect of the Balkan Peninsula, which are home for a variety of Pelophylax genetic lineages. The mtDNA haplotypes found in this study corresponded to P. ridibundus and P.epeiroticus of the Balkan - Anatolian lineage (ridibundus-bedriagae) and to P.lessonae and a divergent lessonae haplotype of the lessonae lineage. The mtDNA genomes showed considerable intraspecific variation and geographic differentiation. The Balkan wide distributed P. ridibundus was found in all studied populations and its nuclear genome, along with either the lessonae or the endemic epeiroticus genome, in all hybrids. An unexpected finding was that the hybrid populations were invariably heteroplasmic, that is, they contained the mtDNA of both parental species. We discussed the possibility that such extensive heteroplasmy is a result of hybridization and it comes from regular leakage of the paternal mtDNA from a sperm of one species that fertilizes eggs of another. In this case, the mechanisms that protect the egg from heterospecific fertilization and further from the presence of sperm mtDNA could become compromised due to their differences and divergence at both, mitochondrial and nuclear DNA. The heteroplasmy once retained in the fertilized egg could be transmitted by hybrid backcrossing to the progeny and maintained in a population over generations. The role of interspecies and heteroplasmic hybrid animals due to their genomic diversity and better fitness compare to the parental species might be of the special importance in adaptations to miscellaneous and isolated environments at the Balkan Peninsula.

Highlights

  • The western Palearctic water frogs of the genus Pelophylax have been classified into three phylogenetic lineages according to their mitochondrial DNA variation: the perezi (P. perezi and P. saharicus), the lessonae (P. lessonae, P. bergeri, and P. shqipericus) and the most diverse ridibundus–bedriagae (P. ridibundus, P. epeiroticus, P. cretensis, P. cypriensis, and P. bedriagae) (Plotner 1998; Plotner and Ohst 2001; Lymberakis et al 2007; Plotner et al 2012)

  • We present the results from a survey of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and microsatellite variation in six Pelophylax spp. populations from southern parts of the Pannonian Basin and the Balkans, which include P. ridibundus and hybrids of P. ridibundus with either P. lessonae (P. esculentus forms in Serbia and Montenegro) or P. epeiroticus (Greek hybrids)

  • Rokas et al (2003) produced a model according to which paternal mtDNA leakage is more likely to happen in species in which heterospecific mating produces fertile progeny

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Summary

Introduction

The western Palearctic water frogs of the genus Pelophylax have been classified into three phylogenetic lineages according to their mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation: the perezi (P. perezi and P. saharicus), the lessonae (P. lessonae, P. bergeri, and P. shqipericus) and the most diverse ridibundus–bedriagae (P. ridibundus, P. epeiroticus, P. cretensis, P. cypriensis, and P. bedriagae) (Plotner 1998; Plotner and Ohst 2001; Lymberakis et al 2007; Plotner et al 2012). Pelophylax ridibundus (Fig. 1) is abundant and widely distributed, while P. shqipericus in coastal Montenegro and northwestern Albania, P. epeiroticus, in western Greece, the island of Corfu and southern Albania, P. cretensis in the island of Crete and P. cypriensis in Cyprus have restricted distribution (Sofianidou and Schneider 1989; Beerli et al 1996; Valakos et al 2007; Plotner et al 2012). Combination of the biogeographic history and present biodiversity of the Balkan Peninsula and eastern Mediterranean makes these Pleistocene refugia exceptional for studying phylogeography and process of speciation (Schmitt 2007)

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