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Featured researches published by Ágnes Major.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2011

Population dynamics and genetic changes of Picea abies in the South Carpathians revealed by pollen and ancient DNA analyses

Enikő Magyari; Ágnes Major; Miklós Bálint; Judit Nédli; Mihály Braun; István Rácz; Laura Parducci

BackgroundStudies on allele length polymorphism designate several glacial refugia for Norway spruce (Picea abies) in the South Carpathian Mountains, but infer only limited expansion from these refugia after the last glaciation. To better understand the genetic dynamics of a South Carpathian spruce lineage, we compared ancient DNA from 10,700 and 11,000-year-old spruce pollen and macrofossils retrieved from Holocene lake sediment in the Retezat Mountains with DNA extracted from extant material from the same site. We used eight primer pairs that amplified short and variable regions of the spruce cpDNA. In addition, from the same lake sediment we obtained a 15,000-years-long pollen accumulation rate (PAR) record for spruce that helped us to infer changes in population size at this site.ResultsWe obtained successful amplifications for Norway spruce from 17 out of 462 pollen grains tested, while the macrofossil material provided 22 DNA sequences. Two fossil sequences were found to be unique to the ancient material. Population genetic statistics showed higher genetic diversity in the ancient individuals compared to the extant ones. Similarly, statistically significant Ks and Kst values showed a considerable level of differentiation between extant and ancient populations at the same loci.Lateglacial and Holocene PAR values suggested that population size of the ancient population was small, in the range of 1/10 or 1/5 of the extant population. PAR analysis also detected two periods of rapid population growths (from ca. 11,100 and 3900 calibrated years before present (cal yr BP)) and three bottlenecks (around 9180, 7200 and 2200 cal yr BP), likely triggered by climatic change and human impact.ConclusionOur results suggest that the paternal lineages observed today in the Retezat Mountains persisted at this site at least since the early Holocene. Combination of the results from the genetic and the PAR analyses furthermore suggests that the higher level of genetic variation found in the ancient populations and the loss of ancient allele types detected in the extant individuals were likely due to the repeated bottlenecks during the Holocene; however our limited sample size did not allow us to exclude sampling effect.This study demonstrates how past population size changes inferred from PAR records can be efficiently used in combination with ancient DNA studies. The joint application of palaeoecological and population genetics analyses proved to be a powerful tool to understand the influence of past population demographic changes on the haplotype diversity and genetic composition of forest tree species.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Is Evolution of Blind Mole Rats Determined by Climate Oscillations

Yarin Hadid; Attila Németh; Sagi Snir; Tomáš Pavlíček; Gábor Csorba; Miklós Kázmér; Ágnes Major; Sergey Mezhzherin; Mikhail Rusin; Yüksel Coşkun; Eviatar Nevo

The concept of climate variability facilitating adaptive radiation supported by the “Court Jester” hypothesis is disputed by the “Red Queen” one, but the prevalence of one or the other might be scale-dependent. We report on a detailed, comprehensive phylo-geographic study on the ∼4 kb mtDNA sequence in underground blind mole rats of the family Spalacidae (or subfamily Spalacinae) from the East Mediterranean steppes. Our study aimed at testing the presence of periodicities in branching patterns on a constructed phylogenetic tree and at searching for congruence between branching events, tectonic history and paleoclimates. In contrast to the strong support for the majority of the branching events on the tree, the absence of support in a few instances indicates that network-like evolution could exist in spalacids. In our tree, robust support was given, in concordance with paleontological data, for the separation of spalacids from muroid rodents during the first half of the Miocene when open, grass-dominated habitats were established. Marine barriers formed between Anatolia and the Balkans could have facilitated the separation of the lineage “Spalax” from the lineage “Nannospalax” and of the clade “leucodon” from the clade “xanthodon”. The separation of the clade “ehrenbergi” occurred during the late stages of the tectonically induced uplift of the Anatolian high plateaus and mountains, whereas the separation of the clade “vasvarii” took place when the rapidly uplifting Taurus mountain range prevented the Mediterranean rainfalls from reaching the Central Anatolian Plateau. The separation of Spalax antiquus and S. graecus occurred when the southeastern Carpathians were uplifted. Despite the role played by tectonic events, branching events that show periodicity corresponding to 400-kyr and 100-kyr eccentricity bands illuminate the important role of orbital fluctuations on adaptive radiation in spalacids. At the given scale, our results supports the “Court Jester” hypothesis over the “Red Queen” one.


Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

HVS-I polymorphism screening of ancient human mitochondrial DNA provides evidence for N9a discontinuity and East Asian haplogroups in the Neolithic Hungary

Zsuzsanna Guba; Éva Hadadi; Ágnes Major; Tünde Furka; Emese Juhász; Judit Koós; Károly Nagy; Tamás Zeke

Analysis of mitochondrial mutations in the HVS-I region is an effective method for ancient human populational studies. Discontinuous haplotype data between the first farmers and contemporary Europeans has been described before. Our contribution is based on a survey initiated on the Neolithic skeletons from Hungarian archaeological sites in the Alföld. This Lowland, the Hungarian Plain, is well excavated as an important region for spread of Neolithic culture from Near East and Balkans toward Central and Western Europe, started circa 8000 years ago. HVS-I sequences from nt15977 to nt16430 of 11 such specimens with sufficient mitochondrial DNA preservation among an extended Neolithic collection were analysed for polymorphisms, identifying 23 different ones. After assigning all single-nucleotide polymorphisms, a novel, N9a, N1a, C5, D1/G1a, M/R24 haplogroups were determined. On mitochondrial control mutations at nt16257 and nt16261, polymorphic PCRs were carried out to assess their distribution in remains. Neolithic data set was compared with contemporary Vác samples and references, resulting in higher frequency of N9a in Alföld as a remarkable genetic discontinuity. Our investigation is the first to study mutations form Neolithic of Hungary, resulting in an outcome of Far Eastern haplogroups in the Carpathian Basin. It is worth further investigation as a non-descendant theory, instead of a continuous population history, supporting genetic gaps between ancient and recent human populations.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2009

Microsatellite markers characterized in the barn owl (Tyto alba) and of high utility in other owls (Strigiformes: AVES)

Ákos Klein; Gavin J. Horsburgh; Clemens Küpper; Ágnes Major; Patricia L. M. Lee; Gyula Hoffmann; Róbert Mátics; Deborah A. Dawson

We have identified 15 polymorphic microsatellite loci for the barn owl (Tyto alba), five from testing published owl loci and 10 from testing non‐owl loci, including loci known to be of high utility in passerines and shorebirds. All 15 loci were sequenced in barn owl, and new primer sets were designed for eight loci. The 15 polymorphic loci displayed two to 26 alleles in 56–58 barn owls. When tested in 10 other owl species (n = 1–6 individuals), between four and nine loci were polymorphic per species. These loci are suitable for studies of population structure and parentage in owls.


Statistical Applications in Genetics and Molecular Biology | 2009

Multilevel Comparison of Dendrograms: A New Method with an Application for Genetic Classifications

János Podani; Attila I. Engloner; Ágnes Major

Procedures are currently available for the evaluation of hierarchical classifications of produce tree dissimilarities or consensus dendrograms. Some tests of cluster validity operate by comparing all possible partitions from a tree with a reference partition. We propose an exhaustive search procedure to compare all partitions from one dendrogram with all partitions derived from the other to detect hierarchical levels at which the two dendrograms show maximum agreement. The method is illustrated using RAPD and microsatellite data in order to detect clones in reed populations. The utility of our approach is its ability to reveal extra information in different genetic data sets which would be hidden otherwise. The method is also useful in any field of science where hierarchical clustering is the main research tool and comparison of results is an objective. Artificial and actual dendrograms, together with randomly simulated trees were used to compare the performance of five classical coefficients of partition dissimilarity. The simulations showed that when meaningful group structure is lacking, then the five coefficients are in full disagreement, but they perform similarly otherwise.


Journal of Biogeography | 2012

Phylogeography of the Vipera ursinii complex (Viperidae): mitochondrial markers reveal an east–west disjunction in the Palaearctic region

Anne-Laure Ferchaud; Sylvain Ursenbacher; Marc Cheylan; Luca Luiselli; Dušan Jelić; Bálint Halpern; Ágnes Major; Tatiana Kotenko; Najme Keyan; Roozbeh Behrooz; Jelka Crnobrnja-Isailović; Ljiljana Tomović; Ioan V. Ghira; Véronique Arnal; Claudine Montgelard


Aquatic Botany | 2010

Clonal diversity along a water depth gradient in a declining reed stand as detected by three different genetic methods

Attila I. Engloner; Ágnes Major; János Podani


Aquatic Botany | 2011

Clonal diversity of Phragmites australis propagating along water depth gradient

Attila I. Engloner; Ágnes Major


Organisms Diversity & Evolution | 2013

Spatial pattern of intraspecific mitochondrial diversity in the Northern Carpathian endemic spring snail, Bythinella pannonica (Frauenfeld, 1865) (Gastropoda: Hydrobiidae)

Zoltán Fehér; Ágnes Major; Virág Krízsik


Biological Journal of The Linnean Society | 2016

Phylogeographic analysis reveals northerly refugia for the riverine amphibian Triturus dobrogicus (Caudata: Salamandridae)

Judit Vörös; Peter Mikulíček; Ágnes Major; Ernesto Recuero; Jan W. Arntzen

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Attila I. Engloner

Eötvös Loránd University

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Judit Nédli

Hungarian Natural History Museum

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János Podani

Eötvös Loránd University

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Virág Krízsik

Hungarian Natural History Museum

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Zoltán Fehér

Hungarian Natural History Museum

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Zsuzsanna Guba

Hungarian Natural History Museum

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Attila Németh

Eötvös Loránd University

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