molecular systematics Flashcards
prof faisal
How does molecular systematics work?
Makes use of proteins in drawing systematic and biogeographic conclusions, including:
- Nuclear DNA
- Mitochondrial DNA
- Ribosomal nucleic acids
The basic premise…
The basic assumption is that hereditary information is carried by molecules of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid)…
Why use molecules?
- Recognition of cryptic species
- Recognition of large, unresolved groups
- Resolving phylogenies at higher levels.
Nature of molecular characters
- Actual structure of compounds (e.g., chemical composition of toxic skin secretions/nucleotide sequences of DNA fragments)
- Comparative estimates of relative similarity of compounds (e.g., immunological assays)
3 advantages of the molecular methods
- Permits inferences on probable time of splitting of phyletic lineages
- Permits inferences on geography of splitting events
- Phylogenies produce important insights into taxonomy, including:
- Evolution of characters
- Long-term patterns and dynamics of adaptation and divergence
- (Drawbacks: some molecules may evolve at different times in different taxa)
Electrophoresis
molecular techniques
appropriate (simplicity of use/inexpensive) for relationships of individuals within and among populations
DNA sequencing
Molecular technique
examination of higher-level relationships (which represent older divergences and speciation)
molecular phylogeny
study of evolutionary relationships among organisms using techniques of molecular biology
molecular marker
A segment of DNA found at a specific site in the genome.
Has properties that enable it to be uniquely recognized using molecular tools such as gel electrophoresis.
Examples: Isozyme loci, microsatellite loci, RFLP, mtDNA and other relevant markers
4 examples of molecular marker
- Isozyme loci
- microsatellite loci
- RFLP
- mtDNA
- other relevant markers
8 techniques in molecular systematics
- Allozyme/isozyme analyses
- Flow cytometry
- Mitochondrial (mtDNA)
- RAPD
- Microsatellite
- Minisatellite/DNA sequence
- AFLP
- RFLP of mt-DNA
2 methods of DNA sequencing
- Chemical degradation method
- Chain termination method (preferred, as longer sequences can be obtained)
1) Random Amplified Polymorphic DNAs (RAPD)
- Detects sequence changes within the annealing sites of PCR primers, resulting in the presence or absence of amplification products from a particular locus.
- Dominant inheritance
- Useful for screening differnces among individuals, populations, and species
- Advantages: i) PCR – lots of product ii) visible on gel without probe
- Disadvantages:
- i) hard to standardize ii) results vary depending on reaction conditions