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Historical Introduction of Japanese Wild Mice, Mus musculus, from South China and the Korean Peninsula

  • Nunome, Mitsuo (Laboratory of Ecology and Genetics, Graduate School of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University) ;
  • Suzuki, Hitoshi (Laboratory of Ecology and Genetics, Graduate School of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University) ;
  • Moriwaki, Kazuo (RIKEN, Bioresource Center)
  • Received : 2013.04.09
  • Accepted : 2013.08.31
  • Published : 2013.10.31

Abstract

In Japan, the wild house mouse Mus musculus consists of two lineages, one from Southeast Asia (Mus musculus castaneus; CAS) and one from northern Eurasia (Mus musculus musculus; MUS). However, the exact origins of the parental lineages are unclear. A recent work using mitochondrial sequences revealed that Japanese CAS and MUS are closely related to haplotypes from South China and the Korean Peninsula, respectively. Recent phylogeographic analyses using nuclear gene sequences have also confirmed a close relationship between Japan and Korea in the MUS component. However, the Japanese CAS components in the nuclear genome are likely to be unique and to differ from those of other CAS territories, including South China. Although the origins are still unresolved, these results allow us to conclude that two areas of the continent, South China and the Korean Peninsula, are the primary source areas of Japanese wild mice and suggest pre-historical introductions associated with certain historical agricultural developments in East Asia.

Keywords

References

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