Published
online: 27 February 2006; | doi:10.1038/news060227-1
Mixing
subspecies cause problems for genetic fingerprinting scheme.
Hannah Hickey
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How many other
butterflies might be mistaken for the wrong species? No one yet knows.
© Getty |
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A
study of butterflies has highlighted a hotly debated glitch in DNA
barcoding, a scheme by which some researchers hope to quickly catalogue
vast numbers of species. Biologists sampling Karner blue butterflies
have found that genetic scans failed to identify the endangered animals.
"This
is clearly one case where if you were using DNA barcoding to identify
units for conservation, it would be failing," says co-author Chris Nice
of Texas State University in San Marcos.
The
Karner blue, famously first identified by the novelist Vladimir Nabokov
in the 1940s, differs from related butterflies in its feeding
preferences and in the patterns on its tiny wings. Over the years, the
Karner blue population has dwindled to some 1% of its previous numbers,
leaving just a few thousand individuals in the northeastern United
States.
Nice
and his colleagues had previously looked at the genetics of these
butterflies and found interesting patterns in how the maternal DNA had
been passed down. So they set out to determine if and how this would
influence DNA barcoding's results.
Coded up
Barcoding
aims to identify an organism by using a minimum amount of genetic
information as a quick, species-specific tag. Such a tool should help
researchers to map biodiversity, identify new species and aid in
conservation. Some have even envisioned a future in which border agents
could scan shipping containers for endangered specimens using the
technique.
A standard method for
barcoding, proposed in 2003, is to identify animals by using the cytochrome
oxidase I (COI) gene in the mitochondria: DNA that lives
outside the cell nucleus. But Nice's team found that the COI
and COII genes pegged the presumed western Karners as belonging
to a more common subspecies: the Melissa blue butterfly.
To
check the disparity, the biologists laboriously analysed 143 locations
in the nuclear DNA of 190 butterflies. This more exhaustive method
supported the biologist's old-fashioned assessment of butterfly
taxonomy based on physical appearance.
Leaking genes
The
reason for the barcoding's failure, the authors believe, is that
mitochondrial genes may have leaked from one subspecies to the other
through a few rare interbreedings.
Whereas
nuclear DNA becomes diluted over time through further breeding,
mitochondrial DNA, which is inherited solely from the mother, doesn't
recombine and so continues to look like that of the foreign
subspecies'. This DNA can become entrenched in future generations,
particularly if it offers some selective advantage. |