2005
DOI: 10.1038/sj.hdy.6800657
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Rapid recent radiation of S-RNase lineages in Witheringia solanacea (Solanaceae)

Abstract: Strong frequency-dependent selection as found in the selfincompatibility loci of flowering plants maintains allelic lineages for extremely long time scales, such that allelic genealogies can shed insight into long-term demographic patterns of species. Effective mutation rate, as well as demographic change such as population bottlenecks, can influence genealogical structure. In addition, loss of functionality at the self-incompatibility locus is likely to affect radiation rates. Partial sequences for 21 S-RNase… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…For all alleles tested, we rejected the null hypothesis of full compatibility; thus, the S-RNase sequences isolated in this study represent unique specificities. Although allelic diversity in our sample is within the range reported for Solanaceae with GSI (Richman et al, 1995;Wang et al, 2001;Lu, 2002;Stone and Pierce, 2005;Savage and Miller, 2006), we recovered fewer alleles than are typically reported. For example, Igic et al, 2007 report 30 alleles from 34 individuals of the closely related species S. chilense, although several factors likely contribute to this discrepancy.…”
Section: Js Miller and Jl Kostyunmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…For all alleles tested, we rejected the null hypothesis of full compatibility; thus, the S-RNase sequences isolated in this study represent unique specificities. Although allelic diversity in our sample is within the range reported for Solanaceae with GSI (Richman et al, 1995;Wang et al, 2001;Lu, 2002;Stone and Pierce, 2005;Savage and Miller, 2006), we recovered fewer alleles than are typically reported. For example, Igic et al, 2007 report 30 alleles from 34 individuals of the closely related species S. chilense, although several factors likely contribute to this discrepancy.…”
Section: Js Miller and Jl Kostyunmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…GSI is well studied in Solanaceae and has been characterized for natural populations of species from several genera (eg, Lycium, Richman, 2000;Petunia, Wang et al, 2001; Physalis, Kohn, 1999;Solanum, Richman et al, 1995;Witheringia, Richman andKohn, 2000, Stone andPierce, 2005). Data from these species generally meet expectations; individuals are heterozygous and populations are highly polymorphic at the S-RNase locus (see reviews by Lawrence, 2000;Castric and Vekemans, 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…Despite equal numbers of TS lineages between two species of Witheringia, estimates of S-RNase diversity were over twice as high for W. solanacea compared to W. maculata (Stone and Pierce, 2005). Similarly, Richman and Kohn's (1999) comparison of Physalis cinerascens and Physalis crassifolia, showed variation in allele number but not allelic age, as measured by the number of TG lineages.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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