J. Robert Macey
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by J. Robert Macey.
Systematic Biology | 2004
Ted Townsend; Allan Larson; Edward Louis; J. Robert Macey
Squamate reptiles (snakes, lizards, and amphisbaenians) serve as model systems for evolutionary studies of a variety of morphological and behavioral traits, and phylogeny is crucial to many generalizations derived from such studies. Specifically, the traditional dichotomy between Iguania (anoles, iguanas, chameleons, etc.) and Scleroglossa (skinks, geckos, snakes, etc.) has been correlated with major evolutionary shifts within Squamata. We present a molecular phylogenetic study of 69 squamate species using approximately 4600 (2876 parsimony-informative) base pairs (bp) of DNA sequence data from the nuclear genes RAG-1(approximately 2750 bp) and c-mos(approximately 360 bp) and the mitochondrial ND2 region (approximately 1500 bp), sampling all major clades and most major subclades. Under our hypothesis, species previously placed in Iguania, Anguimorpha, and almost all recognized squamate families form strongly supported monophyletic groups. However, species previously placed in Scleroglossa, Varanoidea, and several other higher taxa do not form monophyletic groups. Iguania, the traditional sister group of Scleroglossa, is actually highly nested within Scleroglossa. This unconventional rooting does not seem to be due to long-branch attraction, base composition biases among taxa, or convergence caused by similar selective forces acting on nonsister taxa. Studies of functional tongue morphology and feeding mode have contrasted the similar states found in Sphenodon(the nearest outgroup to squamates) and Iguania with those of Scleroglossa, but our findings suggest that similar states in Sphenodonand Iguania result from homoplasy. Snakes, amphisbaenians, and dibamid lizards, limbless forms whose phylogenetic positions historically have been impossible to place with confidence, are not grouped together and appear to have evolved this condition independently. Amphisbaenians are the sister group of lacertids, and dibamid lizards diverged early in squamate evolutionary history. Snakes are grouped with iguanians, lacertiforms, and anguimorphs, but are not nested within anguimorphs.
Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1997
J. Robert Macey; Allan Larson; Natalia B. Ananjeva; Theodore J. Papenfuss
Abstract. A phylogenetic tree for major lineages of iguanian lizards is estimated from 1,488 aligned base positions (858 informative) of newly reported mitochondrial DNA sequences representing coding regions for eight tRNAs, ND2, and portions of ND1 and COI. Two well-supported groups are defined, the Acrodonta and the Iguanidae (sensu lato). This phylogenetic hypothesis is used to investigate evolutionary shifts in mitochondrial gene order, origin for light-strand replication, and secondary structure of tRNACys. These three characters shift together on the branch leading to acrodont lizards. Plate tectonics and the fossil record indicate that these characters changed in the Jurassic. We propose that changes to the secondary structure of tRNACys may destroy function of the origin for light-strand replication which, in turn, may facilitate shifts in gene order.
Methods in Enzymology | 2005
Jeffrey L. Boore; J. Robert Macey; Mónica Medina
Comparing complete animal mitochondrial genome sequences is becoming increasingly common for phylogenetic reconstruction and as a model for genome evolution. Not only are they much more informative than shorter sequences of individual genes for inferring evolutionary relatedness, but these data also provide sets of genome-level characters, such as the relative arrangements of genes, which can be especially powerful. We describe here the protocols commonly used for physically isolating mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), for amplifying these by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) or rolling circle amplification (RCA), for cloning, sequencing, assembly, validation, and gene annotation, and for comparing both sequences and gene arrangements. On several topics, we offer general observations based on our experiences with determining and comparing complete mitochondrial DNA sequences.
Evolution | 2005
João Alexandrino; Stuart J. E. Baird; Lucinda P. Lawson; J. Robert Macey; Craig Moritz; David B. Wake
Abstract The analysis of interactions between lineages at varying levels of genetic divergence can provide into the process of speiation through the accumulation of incompatiable mutations. Ring species, and especially the Ensatina eschscholtzii system exemplify this approach. The plethodontid salamanders E. eschscholtzii xanthoptica and E. eschscholtzii platensis hybridize in the central Sierran foothills of California. We compared the genetic structure across two transects (southern and northern Calaveras Co.), one of which was resampled over 20 years, and examined diagnostic molecular markers (eight allozyme loci and mitochondrial DNA) and a diagnostic quantitative trait (color pattern). Key results across all studies were: (1) cline centers for all markers were coincident and the zones were narrow, with width estimates of 730 m to 2000 m; (2) cline centers at the northern Calveras transect were coincident between 1981 and 2001, demonstrating repeatability over five generations; (3) there were very few if any putative F1S, but a relatively high number of backcrossed individuals in the central portion of transects; and (4) we found substantial linkage disequilibrium in all three studies and strong heterozygote deficit both in northern Calaveras, in 2001, and southern Calaveras. Both linkage disequilibrium and heterozygote deficit showed maximum values near the center of the zones. Using estimates of cline width and dispersal, we infer strong selection against hybrids. This is sufficient to promote accumulation of differences at loci that are neutral or under divergent selection, but would still allow for introgression of adaptive alleles. The evidence for strong but incomplete isolation across this centrally located contact is consistent with theory suggesting a gradual increase in postzygotic incompatibility between allopatric populations subject to divergent selection and reinforces the value of Ensatina as a system for the study of divergence and speciation at multiple stages.
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2008
J. Robert Macey; Jennifer V. Kuehl; Allan Larson; Michael D. Robinson; Ismail H. Ugurtas; Natalia B. Ananjeva; Hafizur Rahman; Hamid Iqbal Javed; Ridwan Mohamed Osman; Ali Doumma; Theodore J. Papenfuss
Department of Biology, Merritt College, 12500 Campus Drive, Oakland, CA 94619, USA Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA Department of Evolutionary Genomics, DOE Joint Genome Institute, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 2800 Mitchell Drive, Walnut Creek, CA 94598-1631, USA Department of Biology, Box 1137, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63130-4899, USA Department of Biology, Sultan Qaboos University, P.O. Box 36, Al Khoud, PC 123, Muscat, Oman Department of Biology, Uludag University, 16059 Bursa, Turkey Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg 199034, Russia h Zoological Survey Department, Government of Pakistan, Block 61, Pakistan Secretariat, Shahrah-e-Iraq, Karachi, Pakistan i Zoological Survey Department, Government of Pakistan, Kiyani Road, Bhara Kahu, Islamabad, Pakistan Amoud University, Borama, Somaliland k Faculty of Sciences, Abdou Moumouni University of Niamey, P.O. Box 10662 Niamey, Niger
Biology Letters | 2006
J. Robert Macey; James A. Schulte; Jared L. Strasburg; Jennifer A. Brisson; Allan Larson; Natalia B. Ananjeva; Yuezhao Wang; James F. Parham; Theodore J. Papenfuss
Darwin first recognized the importance of episodic intercontinental dispersal in the establishment of worldwide biotic diversity. Faunal exchange across the Bering Land Bridge is a major example of such dispersal. Here, we demonstrate with mitochondrial DNA evidence that three independent dispersal events from Asia to North America are the source for almost all lizard taxa found in continental eastern North America. Two other dispersal events across Beringia account for observed diversity among North American ranid frogs, one of the most species-rich groups of frogs in eastern North America. The contribution of faunal elements from Asia via dispersal across Beringia is a dominant theme in the historical assembly of the eastern North American herpetofauna.
Systematic Biology | 2000
J. Robert Macey; James A. Schulte; Allan Larson; Natalia B. Ananjeva; Yuezhao Wang; Rohan Pethiyagoda; Nasrullah Rastegar-Pouyani; Theodore J. Papenfuss
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 1998
J. Robert Macey; James A. Schulte; Natalia B. Ananjeva; Allan Larson; Nasrullah Rastegar-Pouyani; Sakhat M. Shammakov; Theodore J. Papenfuss
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004
Rachel Lockridge Mueller; J. Robert Macey; Martin Jaekel; David B. Wake; Jeffrey L. Boore
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 1998
J. Robert Macey; James A. Schulte; Allan Larson; Zhili Fang; Yeuzhao Wang; Boris S. Tuniyev; Theodore J. Papenfuss