Elsewhere on the web: Viking mice conquered much of British Isles, 'Viking mouse' invasion tracked
Proceedings of the Royal Society B doi: 10.1098/rspb.2008.0958
Of mice and (Viking?) men: phylogeography of British and Irish house mice
Jeremy B. Searle et al.
Abstract
The west European subspecies of house mouse (Mus musculus domesticus) has gained much of its current widespread distribution through commensalism with humans. This means that the phylogeography of M. m. domesticus should reflect patterns of human movements. We studied restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and DNA sequence variations in mouse mitochondrial (mt) DNA throughout the British Isles (328 mice from 105 localities, including previously published data). There is a major mtDNA lineage revealed by both RFLP and sequence analyses, which is restricted to the northern and western peripheries of the British Isles, and also occurs in Norway. This distribution of the ‘Orkney’ lineage fits well with the sphere of influence of the Norwegian Vikings and was probably generated through inadvertent transport by them. To form viable populations, house mice would have required large human settlements such as the Norwegian Vikings founded. The other parts of the British Isles (essentially most of mainland Britain) are characterized by house mice with different mtDNA sequences, some of which are also found in Germany, and which probably reflect both Iron Age movements of people and mice and earlier development of large human settlements. MtDNA studies on house mice have the potential to reveal novel aspects of human history.
Link
"We studied restriction fragment length
ReplyDeletepolymorphism ( RFLP) and DNA sequence variations in mouse mitochondrial (mt) DNA throughout the
British Isles (328 mice from 105 localities, including previously published data)."
is this type of study affected by the highly variable chromosome number of Mus musculus? should the karyotype of the mice have also been considered in this study?
http://genome.cshlp.org/cgi/reprint/8/1/1.pdf
Hi,
ReplyDeleteThe original journal article is free.
http://journals.royalsociety.org/content/g47098702062q2h4/fulltext.pdf
I, predictably, think they should have gotten full mtDNA sequences on those mice.
Rebekah