GEPHE SUMMARY Print
Gephebase Gene
Entry Status
Published
GepheID
GP00001174
Main curator
Courtier
PHENOTYPIC CHANGE
Trait Category
Trait State in Taxon A
Mus musculus
Trait State in Taxon B
Mus spretus (North Africa) and Mus musculus (Spain)
Ancestral State
Data not curated
Taxonomic Status
Taxon A
Latin Name
Common Name
house mouse
Synonyms
house mouse; mouse; Mus musculus Linnaeus, 1758; mice C57BL/6xCBA/CaJ hybrid
Rank
species
Lineage
Show more ... i; Euteleostomi; Sarcopterygii; Dipnotetrapodomorpha; Tetrapoda; Amniota; Mammalia; Theria; Eutheria; Boreoeutheria; Euarchontoglires; Glires; Rodentia; Myomorpha; Muroidea; Muridae; Murinae; Mus; Mus
NCBI Taxonomy ID
is Taxon A an Infraspecies?
No
Taxon B
Latin Name
Common Name
western wild mouse
Synonyms
Mus musculus spretus; western wild mouse; Algerian mouse
Rank
species
Lineage
Show more ... i; Euteleostomi; Sarcopterygii; Dipnotetrapodomorpha; Tetrapoda; Amniota; Mammalia; Theria; Eutheria; Boreoeutheria; Euarchontoglires; Glires; Rodentia; Myomorpha; Muroidea; Muridae; Murinae; Mus; Mus
NCBI Taxonomy ID
is Taxon B an Infraspecies?
No
GENOTYPIC CHANGE
Presumptive Null
No
Molecular Type
Aberration Type
SNP
SNP Coding Change
Nonsynonymous
Molecular Details of the Mutation
Several candidate coding changes
Experimental Evidence
Taxon A Taxon B Position
Codon - - -
Amino-acid - - -
Authors
Song Y; Endepols S; Klemann N; Richter D; Matuschka FR; Shih CH; Nachman MW; Kohn MH
Abstract
Polymorphisms in the vitamin K 2,3-epoxide reductase subcomponent 1 (vkorc1) of house mice (Mus musculus domesticus) can cause resistance to anticoagulant rodenticides such as warfarin [1-3]. Here we show that resistant house mice can also originate from selection on vkorc1 polymorphisms acquired from the Algerian mouse (M. spretus) through introgressive hybridization. We report on a polymorphic introgressed genomic region in European M. m. domesticus that stems from M. spretus, spans >10 Mb on chromosome 7, and includes the molecular target of anticoagulants vkorc1 [1-4]. We show that in the laboratory, the homozygous complete vkorc1 allele of M. spretus confers resistance when introgressed into M. m. domesticus. Consistent with selection on the introgressed allele after the introduction of rodenticides in the 1950s, we found signatures of selection in patterns of variation in M. m. domesticus. Furthermore, we detected adaptive protein evolution of vkorc1 in M. spretus (Ka/Ks = 1.54-1.93) resulting in radical amino acid substitutions that apparently cause anticoagulant tolerance in M. spretus as a pleiotropic effect. Thus, positive selection produced an adaptive, divergent, and pleiotropic vkorc1 allele in the donor species, M. spretus, which crossed a species barrier and produced an adaptive polymorphic trait in the recipient species, M. m. domesticus.

Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Additional References
RELATED GEPHE
Related Haplotypes
2
EXTERNAL LINKS
COMMENTS
@Introgression @Pleiotropy - One hypothesis to explain the adaptive evolution of vkorc1 in M. spretus implicates adaptation to a granivorous vitamin K-deficient diet. The tolerance of M. spretus to rodenticides could thus be a pleiotropic effect of a physiological adaptation unrelated to rodenticide selection. Other granivorous rodents, including Shaw’s gerbil (Meriones shawi), the Egyptian spiny mouse (Acomys cahirinus), and the golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus), display similar high levels of tolerance to rodenticides despite being naive to the poisons.
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