• Title/Summary/Keyword: On-yang natural populations

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Analysis of Frequencies of Deleterious Chromosomes in On-yang Natural Population of Drosophila melanogaster (언양 자연 집단내 Drosophila melanogaster의 유해 유전자 빈도 분석)

  • 김영필;최영현
    • Journal of Environmental Science International
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    • v.5 no.1
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    • pp.1-6
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    • 1996
  • The genetic variabilities of second chromosomes of Drosophila melanogaster concealed in On-yang natural Population have been analyzed by the Cy/Pm method and an allelism test during two years(1993-1994). The mean frequencies of deleterious(lethal and semilethal) genes in On-yang natural population were estimated to be 23.97% in 1993 and 27.15% in 1994, respectively. The allelism rates between lethal genes in the population were 0.654%(1993) and 1.429%(1994). The mean values of elimination by frequencies of deleterious genes and allelism rates were 0.0004(1993) and 0.0010(1994), respectively. The frequencies of phenotypic sterility of males in 1994 were estimated to be 1.95%, and thoses of genotypic sterility of females and males were estimated to be 1.54% and 2.31%, respectively.

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Genetic Relationships of Rana amurensis Based on Mitochondrial Cytochrome b Gene Sequences

  • Lee, Jung-Eun;Yang, Dong-Eun;Kim, Yu-Ri;Lee, Hyuk;Lee, Hyun-Ick;Yang, Suh-Yung;Lee, Hei-Yung
    • Animal cells and systems
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    • v.3 no.3
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    • pp.303-309
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    • 1999
  • Inter- and intraspecific genetic relationships between Rana amurensis from Korea and Russia and other brown frogs were investigated by nucleotide sequence of a 504 base pair (bp) fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene. Nucleotide sequence similarities among Korean populations of R. amurensis ranged from 99.6% to 97.6% and 98.8% within Russian populations. The nucleotide sequence similarity between Korean and Russian R. amurensis ranged from 86.9% to 85.5%. Based on Kimura-2-parameter distance, the sequence divergence between R. amurensis from Korea and Russia was 16.18% and 18.04% among other related brown frogs. interspecific sequence divergences among R. amurensis and other related brown frogs diverged by 20.3%. Using an estimate of 2-4% mitochondrial DNA sequence divergence per million years, Korean and Russian R. amurensis diverged about 8 to 4 million years ago (Mya) and other brown frogs diverged about 9 to 5 Mya from ancestral frogs and distributed from North Asia to Sakhalin in a short time. In the neighbor-joining and UPGMA tree R. amurensis was clustered into two groups with Korean and Russian populations and the other brown frogs were grouped separately with diverged trichotomous clusters (R. dybowskii and R. pirica, R. okinavana and R. tsushimensis, and R. japonica and R. longicrus).

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Genetic Relationships of Korean Treefrogs (Amphibia; Hylidae) Based on Mitochondrial Cytochrome b and 12S rRNA Genes

  • Jung Eun Lee;Dong Eun Yang;Yu Ri Kim;Hyuk Lee;Hyun Ick Lee;Suh-Yung Yang;Hei Yung Lee
    • Animal cells and systems
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    • v.3 no.3
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    • pp.295-301
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    • 1999
  • The nucleotide sequence of a 447 base pair fragment in the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene and the complete sequence of the mitochondrial 12S ribosomal RNA gene, 938 bp, were analyzed to infer inter- and intraspecific genetic relationships of Hyla japonica and H. suweonensis from Korea and H, japonica from Japan. In the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene, genetic differentiation among H. japonica populations were 9.62% and 15.66% between H. japonica and H. suweonensis. Based on the Tamura-Nei distance, the level of sequence divergence ranged from 0.45% to 2.75% within Korean H. japonica, while 8.31%-8.87% between Korean and Japanese H. japonica and 11.51%-12.46% between H. japonica and H. suweonensis. In the neigh-bor-joining tree, Korean populations of H. japonica were clustered first at 2.22% and followed by Japanese H. japonica and H. suweonensis at 8.51% and 12.29%, respectively. In mitochondrial 12S rRNA gene, genetic differentiation between H. japonica and H. suweonensis nras 7.17% (68 bp) including 7 gaps. Based on Tamura-Nei distance, the level of sequence divergence ranged 3.53% between Korean and Japanese H. japonica and from 4.93% to 5.41% between H. japonica and H. suweonensis. Phenogram pattern of the 12S rRNA gene sequence corresponded with that of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene.

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The Leaf Morphological Variation of Ten Regions of Natural Populations of Machilus thunbergii in Korea (후박나무 10개 천연집단의 엽형질 변이)

  • Yang, Byeong-Hoon;Song, Jeong-Ho;Lee, Jae-Cheon;Park, Young-Goo
    • Journal of agriculture & life science
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    • v.45 no.3
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    • pp.25-33
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    • 2011
  • This study was conducted to examine genetic variation on leaf characteristics of Machilus thunbergii populations. Ten populations were subjected to multivariate analysis for 9 characteristics of leaf morphology. Average length of leaf blade, leaf width, petiole length, vein number were 9.8cm, 4.0cm, 1.8cm, 8.4 respectively, while angle of leaf base and leaf apex were $67.9^{\circ}$ and $78^{\circ}$ respectively. The coefficient of variation (C.V.) on leaf characteristics was 20% which indicate similar features among the populations. Nested analysis showed statistically signigicant differences among populations as well as among individuals within populations. Genetic relationship between populations using complete linkage method showed four groups to Euclidean distance 1.2 and did not show a tendency to cluster into the same group. There were three principal components that had a meaningful eigenvalue over 1.0 among the 9 components. The explanatory power of the top three main components on the total variation was 92.8%. The first principal component (PC) was explained about 40.3% which is mainly correlated with maximum leaf width and the second PC was explained about 28.7% which is correlated with leaf blade length. The third PC was explained about 23.8% which is correlated with petiole length ($X_3$). These characters were important factors for analysis of the relationship among natural populations of M. thunbergii.

Genetic Variation in the Natural Populations of Korean Stewartia (Stewartia koreana Nakai) Based on I-SSR Analysis (I-SSR 분석에 의한 노각나무 천연집단의 유전변이)

  • Yang Byeung-Hoon;Koo Yeong-Bon;Park Yong-Goo;Han Sang-Don
    • Korean Journal of Plant Resources
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    • v.19 no.1
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    • pp.189-195
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    • 2006
  • We investigated the genetic variation in Stewartia koreana Nakai by examining 61 I-SSR amplicons in 120 individuals distributed among six natural populations in Korea. The overall percentage of polymorphic I-SSR amplicons was 81.9% and mean number of amplicons per I-SSR primer was 12.2. Levels of genetic diversity within 6 populations were similar each other[Shannon's Index $0.358{\sim}0.467$(mean: 0.407)]. The Mt. Obong population had the highest level of genetic diversity and was most distinctive from the other populations. Most variation existed among individuals within population(88.2%). Genetic differentiation among populations(${\phi}_{ST}$) was 0.118. The UPGMA dendrogram based on the genetic distance failed in showing decisive geographic relationships.

Genetic diversity and structure of natural populations of Picea jezoensis in South Korea

  • Lee, Seok Woo;Yang, Byeong Hoon;Hur, Seong Doo;Lee, Jung Joo;Song, Jeong Ho;Moriguchi, Yoshinari
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.97 no.2
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    • pp.187-195
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    • 2008
  • Picea jezoensis (Sieb. et Zucc.) Carriere is one of the major and widespread components of the cold-temperate and boreal forests in Russian Far East, northeast China, Korea, and Japan. However, it is restricted to a highly fragmented range in South Korea with small populations. Mean expected heterozygosity $(H_e)$ based on 22 loci in 11 isozyme systems was 0.077 for four sampled populations that covered the whole distribution range of P. jezoensis in South Korea. This value is within the range reported for conifers, but it is very low compared to that of other spruce species as well as that of P. jezoensis populations in Russian Far East. Most populations had a slight excess of heterozygotes and the Wright's $F_{IS}$ (-0.019) was comparable to that previously reported for other spruce species. In all of the four populations, the Wilcoxon sign-rank test indicated no greater heterozygosity than that expected for populations at mutation-drift equilibrium, suggesting that the populations have not been bottlenecked recently. Despite a fragmented range and isolated populations, population differentiation was not high $(F_{ST}=0.047)$ and the number of migrants per generation was 5.09. Nei's genetic distances were also small $({\bar{D}}=0.005)$ but strongly related to geographic distances between populations, suggesting an Isolation by Distance. The northernmost isolate, Mt. Gyebang population was genetically distinct from the other three populations. Implications for the conservation of genetic variation of P. jezoensis in South Korea were discussed.

Genetic Diversify and Population Structure of Two Korean Pond Frog Species, Rana nigromaculata and R. plancyi (Anura, Ranidae), with a Survey of Temporal Genetic Variation in R. nigromaculata

  • Suh-Yung Yang;Jong-Bum Kim;Mi-Sook Min;Jae-Hwa Suh
    • Animal cells and systems
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    • v.3 no.3
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    • pp.275-283
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    • 1999
  • Korean R. plancyi occupies a restricted area in western South Korea and shows a relatively low level of genic variability (%P=15.2, Ho=0.052, He=0.048). In contrast, R. nigromaculata is broadly distributed in South Korea. The observed low level of variability of R. nigromaculata (%P=14.3, Ho=0.042, He=0.043) is probably due to its recent colonization. Populations of R. nigromaculata exhibited considerable genetic differentiation (F$_{sT}$=0.149) and low level of gene flow (Nm=1.427) among populations, compared to those of R. Plancyi (F$_{sTF$_{sT}$}$=0.096, Nm=2.354), which occupies a restricted area. The observed levels of gene flow among populations of R. nigromaculata (Nm=1.427) over a broad geographic range is relatively higher than other amphibian species. The high level of gene flow is probably the result of the high dispersal abilities of R. nigromaculata. A survey of temporal genic variation of R. nigromaculata showed that there was no significant change on the overall average genetic diversity from 1978 (average He=0.044) to 1997 (average He=0.040). Wright's F-statistics also indicated no significant genetic differentiation from 1978 (F$_{sT}$=0.118) to 1997 (F$_{sT}$=0.108). This suggests that the environmental change appears to have had little influence on the genetic composition of R. nigromaculata in the study areas during the past 20 years. The low level of temporal variation might be due to the result of high dispersal abilities and wide migration range of this species.

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Development and characterization of 21 microsatellite markers in Daphne kiusiana, an evergreen broad-leaved shrub endemic to Korea and Japan

  • Lee, Jung-Hyun;Cho, Won-Bum;Yang, Sungyu;Han, Eun-Kyeong;Lyu, Eun-Seo;Kim, Wook Jin;Moon, Byeong Cheol;Choi, Goya
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.47 no.1
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    • pp.6-10
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    • 2017
  • Microsatellite markers were isolated for Daphne kiusiana var. kiusiana (Thymelaeaceae), an evergreen broad-leaved shrub endemic to Korea and Japan. Because its populations in Jeju Island are morphologically controversial, and consistently threatened by anthropogenic pressures, taxonomic delimitation and conservation effort are required at the genetic level. We developed 21 polymorphic microsatellite loci from Next Generation Sequencing data. The primer set included di-, tri-, and tetra-nucleotide repeats. Variability in the markers was tested for 80 individuals of D. kiusiana from three natural populations in Jeju Island and Japan. Among the 21 loci, three were unavailable for population JKJU of Japan. The Neighbor-Joining tree based on microsatellite markers described here classified the three populations into two groups according to geographical or morphological traits. These will be a powerful genetics tool for determining the taxonomic boundary and establishing suitable conservation strategies for D. kiusiana in Jeju Island.

Genetic Diversity and Population Structure of Brassica juncea by Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) (RAPD를 이용한 겨자의 유전적 다양성과 집단구조)

  • Oh, Yung-Hee;Moon, Sung-Gi;Chae, Yang-Hee;Hong, Hwa-Jin;Cho, Min-Cheol;Park, So-Hye;Huh, Man-Kyu
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.20 no.10
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    • pp.1538-1543
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    • 2010
  • This study was conducted to examine the genetic diversity and population structure of 17 Brassica juncea populations in Korea. The technique of random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) produced 60 polymorphic loci and 18 monomorphic loci. In a simple measure of intraspecies variability by the percentage of polymorphic bands, the Jindo population of Cheonnam showed the highest (29.5%). The cultivar exhibited the lowest variation (12.8%). Mean number of alleles per locus (A) and the effective number of alleles per locus ($A_E$) were 1.221 and 1.167, respectively. As the typical populations of this species were small, isolated, and patchily distributed in their natural populations, they maintained a low level of genetic diversity of fourteen primers. On a per locus basis, total genetic diversity values ($H_T$) and interlocus variation in the within-population genetic diversity ($H_S$) were 0.347 and 0.141, respectively. On a per-locus basis, the proportion of total genetic variation due to differences among populations ($G_{ST}$) was 0.589. This indicated that about 58.9% of the total variation was among populations. The estimate of gene flow, based on $G_{ST}$, was very low among Korean populations of B. juncea ($N_m$=0.617). These results suggest that the geological distance dispersal of wild B. juncea is the best event. RAPD markers are very effective in classifying natural population levels of B. juncea in Korea.

Genetic Variation of Abies holophylla Populations in South Korea Based on ISSR Markers (ISSR 분석에 의한 전나무 집단의 유전변이)

  • Kim, Young-Mi;Hong, Kyung Nak;Lee, Jei Wan;Yang, Byeong-Hoon
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.103 no.2
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    • pp.182-188
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    • 2014
  • Genetic diversity and genetic differentiation in six natural populations of Abies holophylla Max were investigated using ISSR marker system. From 6 ISSR primers, the average percentage of polymorphic loci was 85.6%, and the average expected heterozygosity ($H_e$) was 0.288. From the result of AMOVA, 94.4% of total genetic variation came from the differences among individuals within populations, and 5.6% was caused by those of among-populations. On the basis of Bayesian inference, genetic differentiation (${\theta}^{II}$ and $G_{ST}$) and inbreeding coefficient for all populations were 0.045, 0.038, and 0.509, respectively. The correlation between genetic distance and geographical distance was highly significant at the Mental's test (r = 0.74, P < 0.05). Six populations divided into two groups according to the results of UPGMA and PCA. One group included Namwon, Cheongdo and Mungyeong population. The other was Inje, Hongcheon and Pyeongchang population. Also, in Bayesian clustering analysis, 6 populations were divided into two clusters. But Cheongdo population was assigned into the other cluster unlike those of UPGMA or PCA. Taking the regions based on the results of the cluster analysis into consideration of AMOVA, 3.9% of genetic variation came from the regional difference. The dendrogram from UPGMA could provide the most genetically reasonable explanation for the distribution of Abies holophylla populations in South Korea.