scholarly journals Variasi genetik dan jarak genetik suku Sakai di Provinsi Riau dengan suku Minangkabau di Desa Pagaruyung Sumatera Barat berdasarkan DNA mikrosatelit

2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 18
Author(s):  
Tyara Tyara ◽  
I Ketut Junitha ◽  
Ni Nyoman Wirasiti
Keyword(s):  

Terdapat beberapa versi yang menjelaskan mengenai asal-usul suku Sakai baik secara literatur ataupun cerita-cerita yang berkembang dan diturunkan sejak dahulu. Masyarakat Sakai sendiri meyakini bahwa leluhur mereka berasal dari sebuah nagari bernama Pagaruyung di Provinsi Sumatera Barat. Oleh karena itu, penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengetahui variasi dan jarak genetik masyarakat suku Sakai di Provinsi Riau dengan suku Minangkabau di Desa Pagaruyung Provinsi Sumatera Barat berdasarkan tiga lokus DNA mikrosatelit (D2S1338, D16S539 dan D13S317). Ditemukan total 10 ragam alel yang tersebar dalam tiga lokus DNA mikrosatelit suku Sakai dan 11 ragam alel pada suku Minangkabau. Hasil analisis data menggunakan software GenAlex 6.503 diperoleh nilai heterozigositas pada suku Sakai dan suku Minangkabau tergolong sedang dengan nilai 0,557 ± 0,062 pada Suku Sakai dan 0,615 ± 0,073 pada suku Minangkabau. Begitu pula dengan nilai diferensiasi genetik (F’ST) pada kedua suku ini juga menunjukkan perbedaan genetik yang sedang (0,088 ± 0,039). Berdasarkan nilai F’ST dan nilai heterozigositas dari tiga lokus DNA mikrosatelit ini maka dapat dikatakan bahwa suku Sakai dan suku Minangkabau memiliki kemiripan secara genetik. Hal ini didukung dengan adanya aliran keluar atau masuknya alel pada suku Sakai dan suku Minangkabau dengan laju migrasi sebanyak empat orang setiap generasi sehingga secara genetik suku Sakai dan suku Minangkabau memiliki kemiripan dengan jarak genetik sebesar 0,269 dan besarnya proporsi gen yang identik (Genetic identity) sebesar 0,764.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melanie R. Smee ◽  
Sally A. Raines ◽  
Julia Ferrari

AbstractMicrobial symbionts often alter the phenotype of their host. Benefits and costs to hosts depend on many factors, including host genotype, symbiont species and genotype, and environmental conditions. Here, we present a study demonstrating genotype-by-genotype (G×G) interactions between multiple species of endosymbionts harboured by an insect, and the first to quantify the relative importance of G×G interactions compared with species interactions in such systems. In the most extensive study to date, we microinjected all possible combinations of five Hamiltonella defensa and five Fukatsuia symbiotica (X-type; PAXS) isolates into the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum. We applied several ecological challenges: a parasitoid wasp, a fungal pathogen, heat shock, and performance on different host plants. Surprisingly, genetic identity and genotype × genotype interactions explained far more of the phenotypic variation (on average 22% and 31% respectively) than species identity or species interactions (on average 12% and 0.4%, respectively). We determined the costs and benefits associated with co-infection, and how these compared to corresponding single infections. All phenotypes were highly reliant on individual isolates or interactions between isolates of the co-infecting partners. Our findings highlight the importance of exploring the eco-evolutionary consequences of these highly specific interactions in communities of co-inherited species.


2010 ◽  
pp. 91-113
Author(s):  
Juri Monducci

The law pertaining to personal data has developed in Italy over a thirty-year span that took us from recognition of such data in the case law, in 1975, to its statutory protection, in 2003. This evolution would subsequently come to the point of specifically regulating the processing of genetic data as data revealing an individual's genetic makeup, thereby also revealing the biological future of individuals and their offspring: this information describes an individual at a core level where the deepest, most unchangeable traits are found and can therefore nurture what is nowadays referred to as genetic determinism, which reduces the person to a complex of genetic data and so ignores the whole layer of characteristics that make each of us unique. There is, then, a discriminatory risk inherent in the processing of genetic data, and equally clear are the psychological implications of such processing, so much so that the need has arisen to have rules in place aimed at regulating the biotechnologies and genetics in particular. These rules have given birth to the so-called fourthgeneration rights, inclusive of the right to ones genetic identity and the right not to know ones genetics (although this is something that had been discussed earlier, too), and it is to a discussion of these rights that this essay is devoted.


1994 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 102
Author(s):  
Mieko Yoshioka ◽  
Tatsushi Toda ◽  
Shigekazu Kuroki

2016 ◽  
Vol 283 (1833) ◽  
pp. 20160811 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dino P. McMahon ◽  
Myrsini E. Natsopoulou ◽  
Vincent Doublet ◽  
Matthias Fürst ◽  
Silvio Weging ◽  
...  

Emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) have contributed significantly to the current biodiversity crisis, leading to widespread epidemics and population loss. Owing to genetic variation in pathogen virulence, a complete understanding of species decline requires the accurate identification and characterization of EIDs. We explore this issue in the Western honeybee, where increasing mortality of populations in the Northern Hemisphere has caused major concern. Specifically, we investigate the importance of genetic identity of the main suspect in mortality, deformed wing virus (DWV), in driving honeybee loss. Using laboratory experiments and a systematic field survey, we demonstrate that an emerging DWV genotype (DWV-B) is more virulent than the established DWV genotype (DWV-A) and is widespread in the landscape. Furthermore, we show in a simple model that colonies infected with DWV-B collapse sooner than colonies infected with DWV-A. We also identify potential for rapid DWV evolution by revealing extensive genome-wide recombination in vivo . The emergence of DWV-B in naive honeybee populations, including via recombination with DWV-A, could be of significant ecological and economic importance. Our findings emphasize that knowledge of pathogen genetic identity and diversity is critical to understanding drivers of species decline.


2011 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 508-510 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karina Braga Gomes ◽  
Ana Paula Fernandes ◽  
Aline Menezes ◽  
Ronaldo Amorim Júnior ◽  
Edward Félix Silva ◽  
...  

INTRODUCTION: Evidence suggests that giardiasis is a zoonotic disease. The present work aimed to evaluate the genetic identity of Giardia duodenalis isolated from human and dog fecal samples from Belo Horizonte. METHODS: Human and dog fecal samples were cultured for isolation of G. duodenalis. To determine the genotype of the isolates, primers that amplify a specific region in rRNA of the protozoan were used. RESULTS: Two G. duodenalis isolates were obtained, which belong to the subgroup A genotype. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that the transmission of giardiasis follows a zoonotic pattern.


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