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Thomas D Als


tda@aqua.dtu.dk

Journal articles

2011
Thomas D Als, Michael M Hansen, Gregory E Maes, Martin Castonguay, Lasse Riemann, Kim Aarestrup, Peter Munk, Henrik Sparholt, Reinhold Hanel, Louis Bernatchez (2011)  All roads lead to home: panmixia of European eel in the Sargasso Sea.   Mol Ecol Feb  
Abstract: European eels (Anguilla anguilla) spawn in the remote Sargasso Sea in partial sympatry with American eels (Anguilla rostrata), and juveniles are transported more than 5000 km back to the European and North African coasts. The two species have been regarded as classic textbook examples of panmixia, each comprising a single, randomly mating population. However, several recent studies based on continental samples have found subtle, but significant, genetic differentiation, interpreted as geographical or temporal heterogeneity between samples. Moreover, European and American eels can hybridize, but hybrids have been observed almost exclusively in Iceland, suggesting hybridization in a specific region of the Sargasso Sea and subsequent nonrandom dispersal of larvae. Here, we report the first molecular population genetics study based on analysis of 21 microsatellite loci in larvae of both Atlantic eel species sampled directly in the spawning area, supplemented by analysis of European glass eel samples. Despite a clear East-West gradient in the overlapping distribution of the two species in the Sargasso Sea, we only observed a single putative hybrid, providing evidence against the hypothesis of a wide marine hybrid zone. Analyses of genetic differentiation, isolation by distance, isolation by time and assignment tests provided strong evidence for panmixia in both the Sargasso Sea and across all continental samples of European eel after accounting for the presence of sibs among newly hatched larvae. European eel has declined catastrophically, and our findings call for management of the species as a single unit, necessitating coordinated international conservation efforts.
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Pernille Koefoed, David P D Woldbye, Thomas v v Hansen, Lene F Eplov, Søren H Christiansen, Ole Mors, Lars V Kessing, Thomas Werge, Katja Kaipio, Ullamari Pesonen, Thomas Fahmy, Erling Mellerup, Klaus D Jakobsen, Elsebeth S Hansen, Gitte M Knudsen, Jens D Bukh, Camilla Bock, Camilla Lindberg, Ann S Kristensen, Henrik Dam, Merete Nordentoft, Thomas D Als, August G Wang, Ulrik Gether, Jens F Rehfeld, Tom G Bolwig (2011)  Association of the leucine-7 to proline-7 variation in the signal sequence of neuropeptide Y with major depression   Acta Neuropsychiatrica no-no  
Abstract: Koefoed P, Woldbye DPD, Hansen TvO, Eplov LF, Christiansen SH, Mors O, Kessing LV, Werge T, Kaipio K, Pesonen U, Fahmy T, Mellerup E, Jakobsen KD, Hansen ES, Knudsen GM, Bukh JD, Bock C, Lindberg C, Kristensen AS, Dam H, Nordentoft M, Als TD, Wang AG, Gether U, Rehfeld JF, Bolwig TG. Association of the leucine-7 to proline-7 variation in the signal sequence of neuropeptide Y with major depression. Objective: There is clear evidence of a genetic component in major depression, and several studies indicate that neuropeptide Y (NPY) could play an important role in the pathophysiology of the disease. A well-known polymorphism encoding the substitution of leucine to proline in the signal peptide sequence of NPY (Leu7Pro variation) was previously found to protect against depression. Our study aimed at replicating this association in a large Danish population with major depression. Method: Leu7Pro was studied in a sample of depressed patients and ethnically matched controls, as well as psychiatric disease controls with schizophrenia. Possible functional consequences of Leu7Pro were explored in vitro. Results: In contrast to previous studies, Pro7 appeared to be a risk allele for depression, being significantly more frequent in the depression sample (5.5%, n = 593; p = 0.009; odds ratio, OR: 1.46) as compared to ethnically matched controls (3.8%, n = 2912), while schizophrenia patients (4.1%, n = 503) did not differ. In vitro, the Pro7 substitution appeared to be associated with reduced levels of NPY without affecting its mRNA level. Conclusion: The Leu7Pro variation may increase the risk of major depression, possibly by affecting the biosynthesis of NPY.
Notes: Journal Article
Noomi Gregersen, Hans A Dahl, Henriette N Buttenschøn, Mette Nyegaard, Anne Hedemand, Thomas D Als, August G Wang, Sofus Joensen, David Pd Woldbye, Pernille Koefoed, Ann S Kristensen, Torben A Kruse, Anders D Børglum, Ole Mors (2011)  A genome-wide study of panic disorder suggests the amiloride-sensitive cation channel 1 as a candidate gene.   Eur J Hum Genet Aug  
Abstract: Panic disorder (PD) is a mental disorder with recurrent panic attacks that occur spontaneously and are not associated to any particular object or situation. There is no consensus on what causes PD. However, it is recognized that PD is influenced by environmental factors, as well as genetic factors. Despite a significant hereditary component, genetic studies have only been modestly successful in identifying genes of importance for the development of PD. In this study, we conducted a genome-wide scan using microsatellite markers and PD patients and control individuals from the isolated population of the Faroe Islands. Subsequently, we conducted a fine mapping, which revealed the amiloride-sensitive cation channel 1 (ACCN1) located on chromosome 17q11.2-q12 as a potential candidate gene for PD. The further analyses of the ACCN1 gene using single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) revealed significant association with PD in an extended Faroese case-control sample. However, analyses of a larger independent Danish case-control sample yielded no substantial significant association. This suggests that the possible risk alleles associated in the isolated population are not those involved in the development of PD in a larger outbred population.European Journal of Human Genetics advance online publication, 3 August 2011; doi:10.1038/ejhg.2011.148.
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Louis Bernatchez, Jérôme St-Cyr, Eric Normandeau, Gregory E Maes, Thomas D Als, Svetlana Kalujnaia, Gordon Cramb, Martin Castonguay, Michael M Hansen (2011)  Differential timing of gene expression regulation between leptocephali of the two?Anguilla?eel species in the Sargasso Sea   Ecology and Evolution 1: 4. 459-467  
Abstract: The unique life-history characteristics of North Atlantic catadromous eels have long intrigued evolutionary biologists, especially with respect to mechanisms that could explain their persistence as two ecologically very similar but reproductively and geographically distinct species. Differential developmental schedules during young larval stages have commonly been hypothesized to represent such a key mechanism. We performed a comparative analysis of gene expression by means of microarray experiments with American and European eel leptocephali collected in the Sargasso Sea in order to test the alternative hypotheses of (1) differential timing of gene expression regulation during early development versus (2) species-specific differences in expression of particular genes. Our results provide much stronger support for the former hypothesis since no gene showed consistent significant differences in expression levels between the two species. In contrast, 146 genes showed differential timings of expression between species, although the observed expression level differences between the species were generally small. Consequently, species-specific gene expression regulation seems to play a minor role in species differentiation. Overall, these results show that the basis of the early developmental divergence between the American and European eel is probably influenced by differences in the timing of gene expression regulation for genes involved in a large array of biological functions.
Notes: Journal Article
Leslie Foldager, Rudi Steffensen, Steffen Thiel, Thomas Damm Als, Hans Jørgen Nielsen, Merete Nordentoft, Preben Bo Mortensen, Ole Mors, Jens Christian Jensenius (2011)  MBL and MASP-2 concentrations in serum and MBL2 promoter polymorphisms are associated to schizophrenia   Acta Neuropsychiatrica no-no  
Abstract: Foldager L, Steffensen R, Thiel S, Als TD, Nielsen HJ, Nordentoft M, Mortensen PB, Mors O, Jensenius JC. MBL and MASP-2 concentrations in serum and MBL2 promoter polymorphisms are associated to schizophrenia. Objective: Causative relations between infections and psychosis, especially schizophrenia, have been speculated for more than a century, suggesting a hypothesis of association between schizophrenia and hereditary immune defects. Mannan-binding lectin (MBL) is a pattern-recognition molecule of the innate immune defence. MBL deficiency is the most common hereditary defect in the immune system and may predispose to infection and autoimmunity. Mannan-binding lectin serine protease-2 (MASP-2) is an MBL-associated serine protease mediating complement activation upon binding of MBL/MASP to microorganisms. The objective was to investigate if schizophrenia is associated with serum concentrations of MBL and MASP-2 or with genetic variants of the genes MBL2 and MASP2 encoding these proteins. Methods: The sample consisted of 100 patients with schizophrenia and 350 controls. Concentrations of MBL and MASP-2 in serum were measured and seven single nucleotide polymorphisms known to influence these concentrations were genotyped. Results: Significant association of disease with genetic markers was found in MBL2 but not in MASP2. Significant difference in MBL serum concentration was found between patients and controls when adjusting for MBL2 haplotypes. For concentrations of MASP-2, a significant interaction effect between a MASP2 variant and disease was found. Interestingly, MASP-2 levels also depended significantly on variants in MBL2 exon 1. Conclusion: This study supports previous studies showing increased complement activity in patients with schizophrenia, indicates aetiological heterogeneity among patients and underlines that multilocus genotypes have to be considered when investigating effects on MBL level. It appears that inclusion of additional components from the system of complement activation is warranted.
Notes: Journal Article
2010
Mette Nyegaard, Jacob E Severinsen, Thomas D Als, Anne Hedemand, Steen Straarup, Merete Nordentoft, Andrew McQuillin, Nicholas Bass, Jacob Lawrence, Srinivasa Thirumalai, Ana C P Pereira, Radhika Kandaswamy, Gregory J Lydall, Pamela Sklar, Edward Scolnick, Shaun Purcell, David Curtis, Hugh M D Gurling, Preben B Mortensen, Ole Mors, Anders D Børglum (2010)  Support of association between BRD1 and both schizophrenia and bipolar affective disorder.   Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet 153B: 2. 582-591 Mar  
Abstract: A recent study published by our group implicated the bromodomain containing protein 1 (BRD1) gene located at chromosome 22q13.33 with schizophrenia (SZ) and bipolar affective disorder (BPD) susceptibility and provided evidence suggesting a possible role for BRD1 in neurodevelopment. The present study reports an association analysis of BRD1 and the neighboring gene ZBED4 using a Caucasian case-control sample from Denmark and England (UK/DK sample: 490 patients with BPD, 527 patients with SZ, and 601 control individuals), and genotypes obtained from a BPD genome wide association (GWA) study of an overlapping English sample comprising 506 patients with BPD and 510 control individuals (UCL sample). In the UK/DK sample we genotyped 11 SNPs in the BRD1 region, of which six showed association with SZ (minimal single marker P-values of 0.0014), including two SNPs that previously showed association in a Scottish population [Severinsen et al. (2006); Mol Psychiatry 11(12): 1126-1138]. Haplotype analysis revealed specific risk as well as protective haplotypes with a minimal P-value of 0.0027. None of the 11 SNPs showed association with BPD. However, analyzing seven BRD1 SNPs obtained from the BPD GWA study, positive associations with BPD was observed with all markers (minimal P-value of 0.0014). The associations reported add further support for the implication of BRD1 with SZ and BPD susceptibility.
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Kevin A Glover, Michael M Hansen, Sigbjørn Lien, Thomas D Als, Bjørn Høyheim, Oystein Skaala (2010)  A comparison of SNP and STR loci for delineating population structure and performing individual genetic assignment.   BMC Genet 11: 1. 01  
Abstract: Technological advances have lead to the rapid increase in availability of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in a range of organisms, and there is a general optimism that SNPs will become the marker of choice for a range of evolutionary applications. Here, comparisons between 300 polymorphic SNPs and 14 short tandem repeats (STRs) were conducted on a data set consisting of approximately 500 Atlantic salmon arranged in 10 samples/populations.
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Peter Munk, Michael M Hansen, Gregory E Maes, Torkel G Nielsen, Martin Castonguay, Lasse Riemann, Henrik Sparholt, Thomas D Als, Kim Aarestrup, Nikolaj G Andersen, Mirjam Bachler (2010)  Oceanic fronts in the Sargasso Sea control the early life and drift of Atlantic eels.   Proc Biol Sci Jun  
Abstract: Anguillid freshwater eels show remarkable life histories. In the Atlantic, the European eel (Anguilla anguilla) and American eel (Anguilla rostrata) undertake extensive migrations to spawn in the oceanic Sargasso Sea, and subsequently the offspring drift to foraging areas in Europe and North America, first as leaf-like leptocephali larvae that later metamorphose into glass eels. Since recruitment of European and American glass eels has declined drastically during past decades, there is a strong demand for further understanding of the early, oceanic phase of their life cycle. Consequently, during a field expedition to the eel spawning sites in the Sargasso Sea, we carried out a wide range of dedicated bio-physical studies across areas of eel larval distribution. Our findings suggest a key role of oceanic frontal processes, retaining eel larvae within a zone of enhanced feeding conditions and steering their drift. The majority of the more westerly distributed American eel larvae are likely to follow a westerly/northerly drift route entrained in the Antilles/Florida Currents. European eel larvae are generally believed to initially follow the same route, but their more easterly distribution close to the eastward flowing Subtropical Counter Current indicates that these larvae could follow a shorter, eastward route towards the Azores and Europe. The findings emphasize the significance of oceanic physical-biological linkages in the life-cycle completion of Atlantic eels.
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Lasse Riemann, Hanna Alfredsson, Michael M Hansen, Thomas D Als, Torkel G Nielsen, Peter Munk, Kim Aarestrup, Gregory E Maes, Henrik Sparholt, Michael I Petersen, Mirjam Bachler, Martin Castonguay (2010)  Qualitative assessment of the diet of European eel larvae in the Sargasso Sea resolved by DNA barcoding.   Biol Lett Jun  
Abstract: European eels (Anguilla anguilla) undertake spawning migrations of more than 5000 km from continental Europe and North Africa to frontal zones in the Sargasso Sea. Subsequently, the larval offspring are advected by large-scale eastward ocean currents towards continental waters. However, the Sargasso Sea is oligotrophic, with generally low plankton biomass, and the feeding biology of eel larvae has so far remained a mystery, hampering understanding of this peculiar life history. DNA barcoding of gut contents of 61 genetically identified A. anguilla larvae caught in the Sargasso Sea showed that even the smallest larvae feed on a striking variety of plankton organisms, and that gelatinous zooplankton is of fundamental dietary importance. Hence, the specific plankton composition seems essential for eel larval feeding and growth, suggesting a linkage between eel survival and regional plankton productivity. These novel insights into the prey of Atlantic eels may furthermore facilitate eel larval rearing in aquaculture, which ultimately may replace the unsustainable use of wild-caught glass eels.
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2008
Michael M Hansen, Dylan J Fraser, Thomas D Als, Karen-Lise D Mensberg (2008)  Reproductive isolation, evolutionary distinctiveness and setting conservation priorities: the case of European lake whitefish and the endangered North Sea houting (Coregonus spp.).   BMC Evol Biol 8: 1. 05  
Abstract: Adaptive radiation within fishes of the Coregonus lavaretus complex has created numerous morphs, posing significant challenges for taxonomy and conservation priorities. The highly endangered North Sea houting (C. oxyrhynchus; abbreviated NSH) has been considered a separate species from European lake whitefish (C. lavaretus; abbreviated ELW) due to morphological divergence and adaptation to oceanic salinities. However, its evolutionary and taxonomic status is controversial. We analysed microsatellite DNA polymorphism in nine populations from the Jutland Peninsula and the Baltic Sea, representing NSH (three populations, two of which are reintroduced) and ELW (six populations). The objectives were to: 1) analyse postglacial recolonization of whitefish in the region; 2) assess the evolutionary distinctiveness of NSH, and 3) apply several approaches for defining conservation units towards setting conservation priorities for NSH.
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David R Nash, Thomas D Als, Roland Maile, Graeme R Jones, Jacobus J Boomsma (2008)  A mosaic of chemical coevolution in a large blue butterfly.   Science 319: 5859. 88-90 Jan  
Abstract: Mechanisms of recognition are essential to the evolution of mutualistic and parasitic interactions between species. One such example is the larval mimicry that Maculinea butterfly caterpillars use to parasitize Myrmica ant colonies. We found that the greater the match between the surface chemistry of Maculinea alcon and two of its host Myrmica species, the more easily ant colonies were exploited. The geographic patterns of surface chemistry indicate an ongoing coevolutionary arms race between the butterflies and Myrmica rubra, which has significant genetic differentiation between populations, but not between the butterflies and a second, sympatric host, Myrmica ruginodis, which has panmictic populations. Alternative hosts may therefore provide an evolutionary refuge for a parasite during periods of counteradaptation by their preferred hosts.
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2006
M B Lauritsen, T D Als, H A Dahl, T J Flint, A G Wang, M Vang, T A Kruse, H Ewald, O Mors (2006)  A genome-wide search for alleles and haplotypes associated with autism and related pervasive developmental disorders on the Faroe Islands.   Mol Psychiatry 11: 1. 37-46 Jan  
Abstract: The involvement of genetic factors in the etiology of autism has been clearly established. We undertook a genome-wide search for regions containing susceptibility genes for autism in 12 subjects with childhood autism and related pervasive developmental disorders (PDDs) and 44 controls from the relatively isolated population of the Faroe Islands. In total, 601 microsatellite markers distributed throughout the human genome with an average distance of 5.80 cM were genotyped, including 502 markers in the initial scan. The Faroese population structure and genetic relatedness of cases and controls were also evaluated. Based on a combined approach, including an assumption-free test as implemented in CLUMP, Fisher's exact test for specific alleles and haplotypes, and IBD(0) probability calculations, we found association between autism and microsatellite markers in regions on 2q, 3p, 6q, 15q, 16p, and 18q. The most significant finding was on 3p25.3 (P(T1)=0.00003 and P(T4)=0.00007), which was also supported by other genetic studies. Furthermore, no evidence of population substructure was found, and a higher degree of relatedness among cases could not be detected, decreasing the risk of inflated P-values. Our data suggest that markers in these regions are in linkage disequilibrium with genes involved in the etiology of autism, and we hypothesize susceptibility genes for autism and related PDDs to be localized within these regions.
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Thomas D Als, Tove H Jorgensen, Anders D Børglum, Peter A Petersen, Ole Mors, August G Wang (2006)  Highly discrepant proportions of female and male Scandinavian and British Isles ancestry within the isolated population of the Faroe Islands.   Eur J Hum Genet 14: 4. 497-504 Apr  
Abstract: The Faroe Islands in the North Atlantic Ocean are inhabited by a small population, whose origin is thought to date back to the Viking Age. Historical, archaeological and linguistic evidence indicates that the present population of the Faroe Islands may have a mixture of Scandinavian and British Isles ancestry. In the present study we used 122 new and 19 previously published hypervariable region I sequences of the mitochondrial control region to analyse the genetic diversity of the Faroese population and compare it with other populations in the North Atlantic region. The analyses suggested that the Faroese mtDNA pool has been affected by genetic drift, and is among the most homogenous and isolated in the North Atlantic region. This will have implications for attempts to locate genes for complex disorders. To obtain estimates of Scandinavian vs British Isles ancestry proportions, we applied a frequency-based admixture approach taking private haplotypes into account by the use of phylogenetic information. While previous studies have suggested an excess of Scandinavian ancestry among the male settlers of the Faroe Islands, the current study indicates an excess of British Isles ancestry among the female settlers of the Faroe Islands. Compared to other admixed populations of the North Atlantic region, the population of the Faroe Islands appears to have the highest level of asymmetry in Scandinavian vs British Isles ancestry proportions among female and male settlers of the archipelago.
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August G Wang, Hans Atli Dahl, Maria Vang, Thomas Damm Als, Henrik Ewald, Torben A Kruse, Ole Mors (2006)  Genetics of panic disorder on the Faroe Islands: a replication study of chromosome 9 and panic disorder.   Psychiatr Genet 16: 3. 99-104 Jun  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The population of the Faroe Islands in the North Atlantic Ocean is likely to have the same ancestry as the Icelandic population. An Icelandic study on Panic Disorder has found some evidence for a loci on chromosome 9. METHODS: On the Faroe Islands we have an ongoing genetic project concerning panic disorder among other psychiatric disorders. We searched for shared alleles and haplotypes in distantly related cases from the isolated and recently found population of the Faroe Islands, using 26 more or less evenly distributed microsatellite markers on chromosome 9, with emphasis on the candidate region identified in the Icelandic study. RESULTS: We have not been able to replicate the Icelandic results. Owing to the study design and sample size, we would not be able to detect areas with small impact.
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J E Severinsen, T D Als, H Binderup, T A Kruse, A G Wang, M Vang, W J Muir, D H R Blackwood, O Mors, A D Børglum (2006)  Association analyses suggest GPR24 as a shared susceptibility gene for bipolar affective disorder and schizophrenia.   Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet 141: 5. 524-533 Jul  
Abstract: Linkage analyses suggest that chromosome 22q12-13 may harbor a shared susceptibility locus for bipolar affective disorder (BPD) and schizophrenia (SZ). In a study of a sample from the Faeroe Islands we have previously reported association between both disorders and microsatellite markers in a 3.6 cM segment on 22q13. The present study investigated three candidate genes located in this segment: GPR24, ADSL, and ST13. Nine SNPs located in these genes and one microsatellite marker (D22S279) were applied in an association analysis of two samples: an extension of the previously analyzed Faeroese sample comprising 28 distantly related cases (17 BPD, 11 SZ subjects) and 44 controls, and a Scottish sample including 162 patients with BPD, 103 with SZ, and 200 controls. In both samples significant associations were observed in both disorders with predominantly GPR24 SNPs and haplotypes. In the Faeroese sample overall P-values of 0.0009, 0.0054, and 0.0023 were found for haplotypes in BPD, SZ, and combined cases, respectively, and in the Scottish sample overall P-values of 0.0003, 0.0005, and 0.016 were observed for similar groupings. Specific haplotypes showed associations with lowest P-values of 7 x 10(-5) and 0.0006 in the combined group of cases from the Faeroe Islands and Scotland, respectively. The G protein-coupled receptor 24 encoded by GPR24 binds melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) and has been implicated with feeding behavior, energy metabolism, and regulation of stress and mood. To our knowledge this is the first study reporting association between GPR24 and BPD and SZ, suggesting that GPR24 variants may confer susceptibility to both disorders.
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2005
H Ewald, F P Wikman, B M Teruel, H N Buttenschön, M Torralba, T D Als, A El Daoud, T J Flint, T H Jorgensen, L Blanco, T A Kruse, T F Orntoft, O Mors (2005)  A genome-wide search for risk genes using homozygosity mapping and microarrays with 1,494 single-nucleotide polymorphisms in 22 eastern Cuban families with bipolar disorder.   Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet 133: 1. 25-30 Feb  
Abstract: Homozygosity mapping is a very powerful method for finding rare recessive disease genes in monogenic disorders and may also be useful for locating risk genes in complex disorders, late onset disorders where parents often are not available, and for rare phenotypic subgroups. In the present study, homozygosity mapping was applied to 24 persons with bipolar disorder from 22 inbred families. The families were selected irrespective of whether other affected family members were present or not. A genome wide screen using genotypes from only a single affected person in each family was performed using the AFFYMETRIX GeneChip HuSNP Mapping Assay, which contains 1,494 single nucleotide polymorphisms. At chromosome 17q24-q25 a parametric multipoint LOD score of 1.96 was found at WIAF-2407 and WIAF-2405. When analyzing 19 additional microsatellite markers on chromosome 17q the maximum parametric multipoint LOD score was 2.08, 1.5 cM proximal to D17S668. The present study replicates a recent significant linkage finding.
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I Zeisset, T D Als, J Settele, J J Boomsma (2005)  Microsatellite markers for the large blue butterflies Maculinea nausithous and Maculinea alcon (Lepidoptera : Lycaenidae) and their amplification in other Maculinea species   MOLECULAR ECOLOGY NOTES 5: 1. 165-168 MAR  
Abstract: We developed microsatellite markers for Maculinea nausithous and Maculinea alcon, two of five species of endangered large blue butterflies found in Europe. Two separate microsatellite libraries were constructed. Eleven markers were developed for M. nausithous and one for M. alcon. The primers were tested on both species as well as on the three other European Maculinea species. The number of alleles per locus ranged from two to 14. These markers will be useful tools for population genetic studies of Maculinea species.
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2004
Tove H Jorgensen, Henriette N Buttenschön, August G Wang, Thomas D Als, Anders D Børglum, Henrik Ewald (2004)  The origin of the isolated population of the Faroe Islands investigated using Y chromosomal markers.   Hum Genet 115: 1. 19-28 Jun  
Abstract: Historical, archaeological and linguistic sources suggest that the ancestors of the present day population in the Faroe Islands may have their origin in several different regions surrounding the North Atlantic Ocean. In this study we use binary and microsatellite markers of the Y chromosome to analyse genetic diversity in the Faroese population and to compare this with the distribution of genotypes in the putative ancestral populations. Using a combination of genetic distance measures, assignment and phylogenetic analyses, we find a high degree of similarity between the Faroese Y chromosomes and the Norwegian, Swedish and Icelandic Y chromosomes but also some similarity with the Scottish and Irish Y chromosomes. Diversity measures and estimates of effective population sizes also suggest that the original gene pool of the settlers have been influenced by random genetic drift, thus complicating direct comparisons with other populations. No extensive immigration from Iceland to the Faroe Islands can be documented in the historical record. We therefore hypothesise that the high degree of Y chromosome similarity between the two populations arose because they were colonised at approximately the same time by males originating from the same regions of Scandinavia and, to a lesser extent, from the British Isles.
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Thomas D Als, Roger Vila, Nikolai P Kandul, David R Nash, Shen-Horn Yen, Yu-Feng Hsu, André A Mignault, Jacobus J Boomsma, Naomi E Pierce (2004)  The evolution of alternative parasitic life histories in large blue butterflies.   Nature 432: 7015. 386-390 Nov  
Abstract: Large blue (Maculinea) butterflies are highly endangered throughout the Palaearctic region, and have been the focus of intense conservation research. In addition, their extraordinary parasitic lifestyles make them ideal for studies of life history evolution. Early instars consume flower buds of specific host plants, but later instars live in ant nests where they either devour the brood (predators), or are fed mouth-to-mouth by the adult ants (cuckoos). Here we present the phylogeny for the group, which shows that it is a monophyletic clade nested within Phengaris, a rare Oriental genus whose species have similar life histories. Cuckoo species are likely to have evolved from predatory ancestors. As early as five million years ago, two Maculinea clades diverged, leading to the different parasitic strategies seen in the genus today. Contrary to current belief, the two recognized cuckoo species show little genetic divergence and are probably a single ecologically differentiated species. On the other hand, some of the predatory morphospecies exhibit considerable genetic divergence and may contain cryptic species. These findings have important implications for conservation and reintroduction efforts.
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T D Als, H A Dahl, T J Flint, A G Wang, M Vang, O Mors, T A Kruse, H Ewald (2004)  Possible evidence for a common risk locus for bipolar affective disorder and schizophrenia on chromosome 4p16 in patients from the Faroe Islands.   Mol Psychiatry 9: 1. 93-98 Jan  
Abstract: Patients with schizophrenia (n=11) and bipolar affective disorder (n=17) from the relatively isolated population of the Faroe Islands were genotyped for 34 polymorphic markers on chromosome 4 in a search for allelic association and haplotype sharing among distantly related patients. When considering bipolar patients only, there was no clearcut support for any region on chromosome 4. The two-marker segment D4S394-D4S2983 at 4p16.1 was, however, supported by a P-value of 0.0162. For patients with schizophrenia, there was reasonable support for 4p16.1 as marker D4S2281 (P=0.0019), a two-marker segment (D4S2281-D4S1605, P=0.0009) and a three-marker segment (D4S2923-D4S2928-D4S1582, P-0.0005) appeared to be associated with schizophrenia, with some alleles/haplotypes occurring with different frequencies in patients compared to controls. When combining both psychiatric disorders, chromosome 4p16.1 received further support from five partially overlapping two- and three-marker segments (D4S394-D4S2983, P=0.0039; D4S2281-D4S1605, P=0.0027 and D4S394-D4S2983-D4S2923, P=0.006; D4S2923-D4S2928-D4S1582, P=0.00007; D4S1582-D4S1599-D4S2281, P=0.005). Increased haplotype sharing in patients with schizophrenia and in the combined data set was partly supported by Fisher's exact test and tests based on the genealogy. Our study yields support for a common risk gene for schizophrenia and bipolar affective disorder on the short arm of chromosome 4, as suggested by previous findings in the neighbouring Scottish population.
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2002
T D Als, D R Nash, J J Boomsma (2002)  Geographical variation in host-ant specificity of the parasitic butterfly Maculinea alcon in Denmark   ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY 27: 4. 403-414 AUG  
Abstract: 1. Maculinea alcon uses three different species of Myrmica host ants along a north-south gradient in Europe. Based on this geographical variation in host ant use, Elmes et al. (1994) suggested that M. alcon might consist of three or more cryptic species or host races, each using a single and different host-ant species. 2. Population-specific differences in allozyme genotypes of M. alcon in Denmark (Gadeberg & Boomsma, 1997) have suggested that genetically differentiated forms may occur in a gradient across Denmark, possibly in relation to the use of different host ants. 3. It was found that two host-ant species are indeed used as hosts in Denmark, but not in a clear-cut north-south gradient. Furthermore, specificity was not complete for many M. alcon populations. Of five populations investigated in detail, one used primarily M. rubra as a host, another exclusively used M. ruginodis, while the other three populations used both ant species. No population in Denmark used M. scabrinodis as a host, although this species was present in the habitat and is known to be a host in central and southern Europe. 4. In terms of number of parasites per nest and number of nests parasitised, M. rubra seems to be a more suitable host in populations where two host species are used simultaneously. Host-ant species has an influence on caterpillar size but this varies geographically. Analyses of pupae did not, however, show size differences between M. alcon raised in M. rubra and M. ruginodis nests. 5. The geographical mosaic of host specificity and demography of M. alcon in Denmark probably reflects the co-evolution of M. alcon with two alternative host species. This system therefore provides an interesting opportunity for studying details of the evolution of parasite specificity and the dynamics of host-race formation.
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2001
T D Als, D R Nash, J J Boomsma (2001)  Adoption of parasitic Maculinea alcon caterpillars (Lepidoptera : Lycaenidae) by three Myrmica ant species   ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR 62: 99-106 JUL  
Abstract: Maculinea butterflies are parasites of Myrmica ant nests. The Alcon blue, Maculinea alcon, is unusual in that it parasitizes the nests of several Myrmica species, using M. rubra, M. ruginodis and M. scabrinodis as hosts in different parts of Europe. In Denmark it uses M. rubra and M. ruginodis, but never M. scabrinodis. Some populations use one of these species exclusively, despite the presence of the alternative host, while others use both hosts simultaneously. To examine the basis of this specificity, and local coadaptation between host and parasite, we offered freshly emerged caterpillars of M. alcon from three populations differing in their host use to laboratory nests of all three recorded host ant species collected from each of the M. alcon populations. We measured the attractiveness of the caterpillars to their host ants as the time taken for them to be adopted by each ant colony. Caterpillars from all populations took longer to be adopted to M. scabrinodis nests than to nests of the other two ant species. Adoption times to M. rubra and M. ruginodis colonies differed: caterpillars from each of the two populations that used a single host species were adopted most quickly by that species when local ant colonies were used. When ant colonies collected from the other two sites were used, this pattern broke down, and there was either no difference in adoption time, or M. rubra adopted caterpillars more quickly. Adoption of caterpillars from the population that used both M. rubra and M. ruginodis as hosts took an order of magnitude longer than caterpillars from populations using a single host species. (C) 2001 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.
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2000
J Drachmann, T D Als, J J Boomsma (2000)  Hatching asynchrony in Linnets : the effects of nest predation and food demand of nestlings   ORNIS FENNICA 77: 4. 155-167  
Abstract: In this paper, we investigate hatching patterns and nestling growth in the Linnet Carduelis cannabina. We evaluate five possible hypotheses to explain the evolution of facultative hatching asynchrony in this species. Both synchronous and asynchronous hatching was observed in the Linnet, with small broods hatching synchronously and large broods hatching mainly asynchronously. Nest predation seemed to cause higher mortality in the late nestling stage compared to the mortality before incubation, which may explain the observed synchronous hatching of small broods. Asynchronous hatching resulted in increased weight hierarchies within broods, but was not associated with brood reduction, as implied by the traditional brood reduction hypothesis. Asynchronously hatched young had higher growth rates than synchronous young, indicating the importance of reducing competition between siblings or reducing peak load in food demands by asynchronous hatching when brood sizes were large. This study thus suggests a mixture of two strategies: synchronous hatching to reduce the risk of nest predation when the brood size is small (nest failure hypothesis), and asynchronous hatching to enhance growth conditions of young when the brood size is large (peak load and/or sibling rivalry hypothesis).
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2001

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