Scientific Reports (Jun 2021)

Characterization of metapopulation of Ellobium chinense through Pleistocene expansions and four covariate COI guanine-hotspots linked to G-quadruplex conformation

  • Cho Rong Shin,
  • Eun Hwa Choi,
  • Gyeongmin Kim,
  • Su Youn Baek,
  • Bia Park,
  • Jihye Hwang,
  • Jumin Jun,
  • Hyun Jong Kil,
  • Hyunkyung Oh,
  • Kyungjin Lee,
  • Sa Heung Kim,
  • Jongrak Lee,
  • Seung Jik Suh,
  • Dong-min Park,
  • Ho Young Suk,
  • Yong Seok Lee,
  • Young Sup Lee,
  • Ui Wook Hwang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-91675-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

Read online

Abstract The land snail Ellobium chinense (L. Pfeiffer, 1855) (Eupulmonata, Ellobiida, Ellobiidae), which inhabits the salt marshes along the coastal areas of northwestern Pacific, is an endangered species on the IUCN Red List. Over recent decades, the population size of E. chinense has consistently decreased due to environmental interference caused by natural disasters and human activities. Here, we provide the first assessment of the genetic diversity and population genetic structures of northwestern Pacific E. chinense. The results analyzed with COI and microsatellites revealed that E. chinense population exhibit metapopulation characteristics, retaining under the influence of the Kuroshio warm currents through expansion of the Late-Middle and Late Pleistocene. We also found four phylogenetic groups, regardless of geographical distributions, which were easily distinguishable by four unidirectional and stepwise adenine-to-guanine transitions in COI (sites 207–282–354–420: A–A–A–A, A–A–G–A, G–A–G–A, and G–G–G–G). Additionally, the four COI hotspots were robustly connected with a high degree of covariance between them. We discuss the role of these covariate guanines which link to form four consecutive G-quadruplexes, and their possible beneficial effects under positive selection pressure.