Abstract

Cavia tschudii Fitzinger, 1867 is a wild guinea pig species living in South America that according to the analysis of mitochondrial genes is the closest wild form of the domestic guinea pig. To investigate the genetic divergence between the wild and domestic species of guinea pigs from a cytogenetic perspective, we characterized and compared the C, G and AgNOR banded karyotypes of molecularly identified Cavia tschudii and Cavia porcellus Linnaeus, 1758 specimens for the first time. Both species showed 64 chromosomes of similar morphology, although C. tschudii had four medium size submetacentric pairs that were not observed in the C. porcellus karyotype. Differences in the C bands size and the mean number of AgNOR bands between the karyotypes of the two species were detected. Most of the two species chromosomes showed total G band correspondence, suggesting that they probably represent large syntenic blocks conserved over time. Partial G band correspondence detected among the four submetacentric chromosomes present only in the C. tschudii karyotype and their subtelocentric homologues in C. porcellus may be explained by the occurrence of four pericentric inversions that probably emerged and were fixed in the C. tschudii populations under domestication. The role of the chromosomal and genomic differences in the divergence of these two Cavia species is discussed.

Highlights

  • Cavia tschudii Fitzinger, 1867 is a wild species of guinea pig (Rodentia, Caviidae) which inhabits northern Chile, southern Peru and Bolivia and northwestern Argentina (Weir 1974, Woods and Kilpatrick 2005)

  • Based on these molecular results and on the analysis of mummified guinea pig remains found in archeological sites, Spotorno et al (2007) suggested that the domestication of the wild guinea pig occurred in southern Peru-northern Chile

  • Considering that the karyotype provides useful characters in taxonomic and systematic studies and that changes in the number and structure of chromosomes may contribute to speciation (King 1993, Searle 1993, Capanna and Redi 1994, Capanna and Castiglia 2004, Marques-Bonet and Navarro 2005, Faria and Navarro 2010), we describe and compare for the first time the G, C and AgNOR banded karyotypes in molecularly identified specimens of the wild montane guinea pig C. tschudii and the domestic guinea pig C. porcellus

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Summary

Introduction

Cavia tschudii Fitzinger, 1867 is a wild species of guinea pig (Rodentia, Caviidae) which inhabits northern Chile, southern Peru and Bolivia and northwestern Argentina (Weir 1974, Woods and Kilpatrick 2005). Molecular analyses of the mitochondrial cytochrome b and 12S RNA genes clearly showed that the closest species to C. porcellus is C. tschudii and not the genetically related C. aperea (Spotorno et al 2004, Dunnum and Salazar-Bravo 2010). Based on these molecular results and on the analysis of mummified guinea pig remains found in archeological sites, Spotorno et al (2007) suggested that the domestication of the wild guinea pig occurred in southern Peru-northern Chile

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