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Karyotypic and molecular evidence supports the endemic Tibetan hamsters as a separate divergent lineage of Cricetinae

Svetlana A. Romanenko, Vladimir S. Lebedev, А. А. Банникова, Svetlana V. Pavlova, Natalia A. Serdyukova, N. Yu. Feоktistova, Qu Jiapeng, Sun Yuehua, А. В. Суров, Alexander S. Graphodatsky

2021Scientific Reports15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The genus status of Urocricetus was defined recently based on morphological and molecular data. Even though the amount of evidence for a separate phylogenetic position of this genus among Cricetinae continues to increase, there is still no consensus on its relationship to other groups. Here we give the first comprehensive description of the U. kamensis karyotype (2n = 30, NFa = 50) including results of comparative cytogenetic analysis and detailed examination of its phylogenetic position by means of numerous molecular markers. The molecular data strongly indicated that Urocricetus is a distant sister group to Phodopus. Comparative cytogenetic data showed significant reorganization of the U. kamensis karyotype compared to karyotypes of all other hamsters investigated earlier. The totality of findings undoubtedly means that Urocricetus belongs to a separate divergent lineage of Cricetinae.

Topics & Concepts

KaryotypeLineage (genetic)BiologyPhylogenetic treeSister groupEvolutionary biologyZoologyGenusPhylogeneticsGeneticsChromosomeCladeGeneGenetic diversity and population structureGenetic Mapping and Diversity in Plants and AnimalsEvolution and Paleontology Studies
Karyotypic and molecular evidence supports the endemic Tibetan hamsters as a separate divergent lineage of Cricetinae | Litcius