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Featured researches published by Muneo Matsuda.


Genetics | 2008

Polytene Chromosomal Maps of 11 Drosophila Species: The Order of Genomic Scaffolds Inferred From Genetic and Physical Maps

Stephen W. Schaeffer; Arjun Bhutkar; Bryant F. McAllister; Muneo Matsuda; Luciano M. Matzkin; Patrick M. O'Grady; Claudia Rohde; Vera L. S. Valente; Montserrat Aguadé; Wyatt W. Anderson; Kevin A. Edwards; Ana Cristina Lauer Garcia; Josh Goodman; James Hartigan; Eiko Kataoka; Richard T. Lapoint; Elena R. Lozovsky; Carlos A. Machado; Mohamed A. F. Noor; Montserrat Papaceit; Laura K. Reed; Stephen Richards; Tania T. Rieger; Susan Russo; Hajime Sato; Carmen Segarra; Douglas R. Smith; Temple F. Smith; Victor Strelets; Yoshiko N. Tobari

The sequencing of the 12 genomes of members of the genus Drosophila was taken as an opportunity to reevaluate the genetic and physical maps for 11 of the species, in part to aid in the mapping of assembled scaffolds. Here, we present an overview of the importance of cytogenetic maps to Drosophila biology and to the concepts of chromosomal evolution. Physical and genetic markers were used to anchor the genome assembly scaffolds to the polytene chromosomal maps for each species. In addition, a computational approach was used to anchor smaller scaffolds on the basis of the analysis of syntenic blocks. We present the chromosomal map data from each of the 11 sequenced non-Drosophila melanogaster species as a series of sections. Each section reviews the history of the polytene chromosome maps for each species, presents the new polytene chromosome maps, and anchors the genomic scaffolds to the cytological maps using genetic and physical markers. The mapping data agree with Mullers idea that the majority of Drosophila genes are syntenic. Despite the conservation of genes within homologous chromosome arms across species, the karyotypes of these species have changed through the fusion of chromosomal arms followed by subsequent rearrangement events.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

A locus for female discrimination behavior causing sexual isolation in Drosophila

Motomichi Doi; Muneo Matsuda; Masatoshi Tomaru; Hiroshi Matsubayashi; Yuzuru Oguma

The genetic basis of sexual isolation that contributes to speciation is one of the unsolved questions in evolutionary biology. Drosophila ananassae and Drosophila pallidosa are closely related, and postmating isolation has not developed between them. However, females of both species discriminate their mating partners, and this discrimination contributes to strong sexual isolation between them. By using surgical treatments, we demonstrate that male courtship songs play a dominant role in female mate discrimination. The absence of the song of D. pallidosa dramatically increased interspecies mating with D. ananassae females but reduced intraspecies mating with D. pallidosa females. Furthermore, genetic analysis and chromosomal introgression by repeated backcrosses to D. pallidosa males identified possible loci that control female discrimination in each species. These loci were mapped on distinct positions near the Delta locus on the middle of the left arm of the second chromosome. Because the mate discrimination we studied is well developed and is the only known mechanism that prevents gene flow between them, these loci may have played crucial roles in the evolution of reproductive isolation, and therefore, in the speciation process between these two species.


Genetica | 2002

Genetics of sexual isolation based on courtship song between two sympatric species: Drosophila ananassae and D. pallidosa

Hirokazu Yamada; Muneo Matsuda; Yuzuru Oguma

Sexual isolation has been considered one of the primary causes of speciation and its genetic study has the potential to reveal the genetics of speciation. In Drosophila, the importance of courtship songs in sexual isolation between closely related species has been well investigated, but studies analysing the genetic basis of the difference in the courtship songs associated with sexual isolation are less well documented. Drosophila ananassae and Drosophila pallidosa are useful for studies of sexual isolation, because of their sympatric distribution and absence of postmating isolation. Courtship songs are known to play a crucial role in sexual isolation between these two species, and the female discrimination behaviour against the courting male has been revealed to be controlled by a very narrow region on the second chromosome. In this study we investigated the genetic basis controlling the song differences associated with their sexual isolation, using intact and wingless males with chromosomes substituted between species. The results obtained from F1 hybrid males between these species indicate the dominance of the song characters favoured by D. pallidosa females. In addition, the results obtained from backcross F2 males indicate that chromosome 2 had a major effect on the control of the song characters associated with sexual isolation.


Genetica | 2005

Reproductive Isolation Among Geographical Populations of Drosophila Bipectinata Duda (Diptera, Drosophilidae) with Recognition of Three Subspecies

Muneo Matsuda; Yoshihiko Tomimura; Yoshiko N. Tobari

Among D. bipectinata Duda, 1923, three subspecies, bipectinata from Southeast Asia (SEA) and Okinawa (OKN), szentivanii stat. nov. from Papua New Guinea (PNG) (Mather & Dobzhansky, 1962) and pacificiae ssp. nov. from South Pacific Ocean (SPO), are recognized. The external morphology of the reproductive organs and the numbers of teeth per row in the sex combs are different between the three subspecies. Furthermore, the sterility of hybrid males between strains from the different regions confirms the subspecies status of each population from SEA, PNG and SPO, together with different gene arrangements in the geographical populations. Although males of the strains from OKN (Okinawa), the northernmost population, show significant differences in the number of teeth of sex combs from males of SEA (Southeast Asia) strains, hybrid males between them are fertile.


Fly | 2009

Evolution in the Drosophila ananassae species subgroup

Muneo Matsuda; Chen-Siang Ng; Motomichi Doi; Artyom Kopp; Yoshiko N. Tobari

Drosophila ananassae and its relatives have many advantages as a model of genetic differentiation and speciation. In this report, we examine evolutionary relationships in the ananassae species subgroup using a multi-locus molecular data set, karyotypes, meiotic chromosome configuration, chromosomal inversions, morphological traits, and patterns of reproductive isolation. We describe several new taxa that are the closest known relatives of D. ananassae. Analysis of Y-chromosomal and mitochondrial haplotypes, shared chromosome arrangements, pre-mating isolation, and hybrid male sterility suggests that these taxa represent a recent evolutionary radiation and may experience substantial gene flow. We discuss possible evolutionary histories of these species and give a formal description of one of them as D. parapallidosa Tobari sp. n. The comparative framework established by this study, combined with the recent sequencing of the D. ananassae genome, will facilitate future studies of reproductive isolation, phenotypic variation, and genome evolution in this lineage.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2008

Potential gene flow in natural populations of the Drosophila ananassae species cluster inferred from a nuclear mitochondrial pseudogene

Kyoichi Sawamura; Kae Koganebuchi; Hajime Sato; Koichi Kamiya; Muneo Matsuda; Yuzuru Oguma

A pseudogene with 94% similarity to mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) was identified and localized to chromosome 4 of Drosophila ananassae. Because this chromosome is believed to have reduced recombination, its history can be traced using the pseudo-COI sequence. Pseudo-COI sequences were obtained from 27 iso-female lines of six taxa belonging to the D. ananassae species cluster in which reproductive isolation is incomplete. The phylogenetic network constructed from seven recognized haplotypes (#0-#6) indicated that different taxa inhabiting the same geographic area share the haplotypes: #1 from Papua New Guinean populations of D. ananassae and pallidosa-like-Wau; #2 from Papua New Guinean populations of D. ananassae, pallidosa-like, and papuensis-like; and #4 from South Pacific populations of D. ananassae and D. pallidosa. Taxon-K has a unique haplotype (#6), and 18 mutation steps separate it from the closest haplotype, #2. We discuss the possibility of chromosome 4 introgression beyond taxon boundaries.


Journal of Insect Behavior | 2008

Behavioral Sequence Leading to Sexual Isolation Between Drosophila ananassae and D. pallidosa

Hirokazu Yamada; Masatoshi Tomaru; Muneo Matsuda; Yuzuru Oguma

Drosophila ananassae and D. pallidosa are closely related, sympatric species that lack postmating isolation. Sexual isolation has been considered important in maintaining them as independent species. To clarify the behavioral processes leading to sexual isolation, we analyzed behavioral sequences and examined the effect of courtship song on mating success and on behaviors of both sexes by surgically removing male wings (song generators), female aristae (song receivers), or female wings (means of fluttering). We found that heterospecific courtship songs evoked female wing fluttering, whereas conspecific courtship song did not. Furthermore, female wing fluttering made courting males discontinue courtship. These findings suggest that strong sexual isolation is achieved through the following behavioral sequence: heterospecific song→female wing fluttering→courtship discontinuation.


Genetics Research | 2004

Genetic analyses of several Drosophila ananassae-complex species show a low-frequency major gene for parthenogenesis that maps to chromosome 2.

Muneo Matsuda; Yoshiko N. Tobari

Parthenogenetic strains of several species have been found in the genus Drosophila. The mode of diploidization in the eggs of females has been found to be post-meiotic nuclear fusion. The genetic basis for this parthenogenesis is not understood but is believed to be under the control of a complex polygenic system. We found parthenogenetic females in an isofemale strain (LAE345) of D. pallidosa-like collected in 1981 at Lae, Papua New Guinea, and established a parthenogenetically reproducing strain. Parthenogenetic strains of D. ananassae and D. pallidosa collected at Taputimu, American Samoa had also been established by Futch (1972). D. ananassae, D. pallidosa and D. pallidosa-like are very closely related species belonging to the ananassae complex of the ananassae species subgroup of the melanogaster species group. Using these three species, we found that more than 80% of females from parthenogenetic strains produced progeny parthenogenetically and that inter-specific hybrid females also produced impaternate progeny. In the present report, we demonstrate that the mode of parthenogenesis of D. ananassae appears to be the post-meiotic nuclear doubling of a single meiotic product, and that a major gene responsible for the parthenogenesis maps to the left arm of the second chromosome of D. ananassae. We also suggest that the genetic basis for parthenogenesis capacity may be identical among the three closely related species. We discuss the function of the gene required for parthenogenesis and its significance for the evolutionary process.


Zoological Science | 2010

Evolutionary Relationships in the Drosophila ananassae Species Cluster Based on Introns of Multiple Nuclear Loci

Kyoichi Sawamura; Koichi Kamiya; Hajime Sato; Yoshihiko Tomimura; Muneo Matsuda; Yuzuru Oguma

The Drosophila ananassae species cluster includes D. ananassae, D. pallidosa, D. parapallidosa, and the cryptic species “pallidosa-like”, “pallidosa-like Wau” and “papuensis-like” Some of the taxa are sympatric in the South Pacific, Papua New Guinea, and Southeast Asia, and gene flow between different taxa has been suspected for a handful of genes. In the present analysis, we examined DNA sequences of introns in four loci: alpha actinin (Actn) on XL, white (w) on XR, CG7785 on 2L, and zinc ion transmembrane transporter 63C (ZnT63C) on 2R. Phylogenetic trees (neighbor-joining and haplotype network) were inconsistent among these loci. Some haplotypes shared between taxa were found for w, CG7785, and ZnT63C, suggesting recent gene flow. However, no haplotypes were shared, for example, between D. ananassae and D. pallidosa for CG7785, which is close to the proximal breakpoint of In(2L)D. This suggests that taxon-specific inversions prevent gene flow, as predicted by the chromosomal speciation hypothesis.


Genome | 2012

Crossing over does occur in males of Drosophila ananassae from natural populations

Beatriz Goñi; Muneo Matsuda; Masa-Toshi Yamamoto; Carlos R. Vilela; Yoshiko N. Tobari

Spontaneous crossing over in males of Drosophila ananassae has been well demonstrated using F(1) individuals from crosses between marker stocks and wild type strains. However, the question of its occurrence in males from natural populations remained open. Here we present the cytological evidence that crossing over does occur in males of D. ananassae from two Brazilian populations, sampled nearly 21 years apart, and in two recently sampled populations, one from Indonesia and one from Okinawa, Japan. Cytological analysis of meiosis in males collected from nature and in sons of females from the same population inseminated in nature revealed the presence of chiasmata, inversion chiasmata, and isosite chromosome breakages in the diplotene cells in all sampled populations. These data demonstrate that reciprocal and nonreciprocal exchanges and chromosome breakages, previously reported as related events of male crossing over, do occur at variable frequencies among males from natural populations.

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Yoshiko N. Tobari

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Yoshihiko Tomimura

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Beatriz Goñi

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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