Abstract

Many works demonstrate the benefits of using highly polymorphic markers such as microsatellites in order to measure the genetic diversity between closely related breeds. But it is sometimes difficult to decide which genetic distance should be used. In this paper we review the behaviour of the main distances encountered in the literature in various divergence models. In the first part, we consider that breeds are populations in which the assumption of equilibrium between drift and mutation is verified. In this case some interesting distances can be expressed as a function of divergence time, t, and therefore can be used to construct phylogenies. Distances based on allele size distribution (such as (δμ)2 and derived distances), taking a mutation model of microsatellites, the Stepwise Mutation Model, specifically into account, exhibit large variance and therefore should not be used to accurately infer phylogeny of closely related breeds. In the last section, we will consider that breeds are small populations and that the divergence times between them are too small to consider that the observed diversity is due to mutations: divergence is mainly due to genetic drift. Expectation and variance of distances were calculated as a function of the Wright-Malécot inbreeding coefficient, F. Computer simulations performed under this divergence model show that the Reynolds distance [57]is the best method for very closely related breeds.

Highlights

  • Assuming a species-like evolution pattern, the time scale that separates breeds is rather low with regards to the hundreds of thousands of years separating species

  • Microsatellite markers are a class of tandem repeat loci exhibiting a high mutation rate

  • A high level of polymorphism can be maintained within relatively small samples

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Summary

Introduction

Assuming a species-like evolution pattern (evolution scheme as a dichotomy), the time scale that separates breeds is rather low with regards to the hundreds of thousands of years separating species. In order to measure the genetic distances between closely related populations like breeds, it is desirable to use highly polymorphic markers such as microsatellites [3,4,9,15,18,24,37, 40, 53, 59, 60, 70]. The high number of microsatellites distributed over whole genomes coupled with their very rapid evolution rates make them useful for working out relationships among very closely related populations [14,21,22,62,64,66]. Microsatellite markers are a class of tandem repeat loci exhibiting a high mutation rate. For a large proportion of microsatellites, the number of alleles observed across mammalian populations can vary between less than 10 to 20 and can be even higher across natural populations of fish [56]

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