Among the seven studied species of the order Eulipotyphla from southern Gansu and northern Sichuan Provinces, China, four species were analysed cytogenetically for the first time (U. aff. soricipes, Ch. hypsibia, S. thibetanus and S. cansulus).
In Talpidae, the most primitive subfamily Uropsilinae includes a single genus (Uropsilus), which formerly consisted of Uropsilus andersoni, U. gracilis, U. soricipes, U. investigator and U. aequodonenia20,21; later, U. nivatus and U. atronates were also recognised as valid species9. One more new species, U. dabieshanensis sp. nov., was recently described based on morphological and molecular genetic data22; thus, now the genus is thought to comprise seven species. At least 15 monophyletic lineages of Uropsilus have been recognised using molecular markers, and it seems that the taxonomic diversity of this genus may still be underestimated9,22. Until now, karyotypes of only two species, U. nivatus and U. andersoni, have been reported. Note that during the description of the karyotype23, U. nivatus was regarded as a subspecies of U. gracilis24 but was later elevated to full species rank9. The karyotype was described for an individual from an area inhabited only by U. nivatus; therefore, we use this name for the species, whose karyotype has been reported by Kawada et al.23. Despite the same 2n = 34, these karyotypes differ in chromosomal morphology as evidenced by a difference in NFa, which is 46 and 52 in U. nivatus and U. andersoni, respectively13,23. This variation is caused by a difference in the number of the subtelo- and acrocentric autosomes. Because only the conventional karyotype is reported for U. andersoni, it is difficult to compare the homologous arms and determine possible rearrangements between these two species. Moreover, the variation in the size of the short arms can be a consequence of some nuances of obtaining the chromosome preparations and then can lead to incorrect determination of NFa. Altogether, the authors13 concluded that the karyotype of U. andersoni is similar to that of U. nivatus.
The U. aff. soricipes karyotype (2n = 36, NFa = 56), described here for the first time, differs from those of the two species mentioned above by smaller numbers of meta- and submetacentric pairs (two pairs instead of four in both U. nivatus and U. andersoni) and a larger number of subtelo- and acrocentric pairs (in total, 15 pairs instead of 12). The comparison of homologous chromosome arms between the U. nivatus and U. soricipes karyotypes indicates that all chromosome arms match between the two species, judging by the G-band pattern. Two small acrocentric pairs (chromosomes 15 and 16) in U. soricipes correspond to metacentric pair No. 2 in the U. nivatus karyotype. Accordingly, the lower 2n in U. nivatus, and apparently in U. andersoni, can be explained by a single Robertsonian fusion resulting in a new metacentric pair. Moreover, these species show a difference in the size of the acrocentric Y chromosome, which is larger in U. aff. soricipes than in the other two species. The silver nitrate staining performed on U. nivatus and U. soricipes chromosomes did not reveal any differences between the karyotypes (the NOR is located within a secondary constriction in subtelocentric pair No. 3 in both species). Thus, more detailed cytogenetic data are needed to investigate karyotype evolution within the genus Uropsilus.
Here we present new findings about the karyotypes of six species of soricids, three of them are described karyotypically for the first time: Ch. hypsibia, S. thibetanus and S. cansulus.
S. bedfordiae belongs to the east Tibetan group of striped shrews, which includes S. cylindricauda and S. excelsus7,25. Previous cytogenetic research has uncovered intraspecific karyotypic variation within S. bedfordiae; 2n = 24–26 and 28 have been reported (Yunnan26; Sichuan13; southern Gansu27). In the present study, we found no polymorphic variants among the nine karyotyped individuals; all the shrews have equal chromosome sets: 2n = 26, NF = 46. In our previous work, karyotypes of two females from Lianhuashan Natural Reserve (site No. 2) were reported27 to contain a smaller number of chromosomal arms: 2n = 26, NF = 44. After re-checking of that material, it turned out that those two individuals are characterised by the same karyotype structure (2n = 26, NF = 46) as the three shrews described here.
Previously, karyotypes with 2n = 26, NF = 46 were detected in three S. bedfordiae individuals from Mt. Laojun (3900 m a.s.l.), Lijiang District in northern Yunnan province26. With the exception of one much larger subtelocentric pair (chromosome 10), those karyotypes were very similar to those described here. The lack of G-banded karyograms for the individuals from Yunnan makes it impossible to compare the homology of chromosomes between them in more detail. Additionally, these authors identified a 2n = 28 karyotype with an additional pair of small metacentrics. Nevertheless, they hypothesised that either it belongs to another species that closely resembles S. bedfordiae, e.g. Sorex cylindricauda, or the additional metacentric pair is the B chromosome.
Among the eight S. bedfordiae specimens from Mount Emei (3000 m a.s.l.) in central Sichuan Province13, two karyotype variants have been found: ‘2n = 24, NF = 46’ and ‘2n = 25, NF = 48’, which differ from each other by the presence of a supernumerary (B) metacentric chromosome in the latter. Besides a lack of B chromosomes, all the 2n = 26, NF = 46 karyotypes described in our study are characterised by the presence of an additional small acrocentric pair (chromosome 12) and a different length of one subtelocentric pair (chromosome 9, Fig. 7).
A comparison of homologous chromosome arms between these G-banded karyotypes (2n = 24/25 and 2n = 26 from this study) indicated that they differ by structural rearrangements in three autosome pairs. The chromosomal rearrangements consist of a pericentric inversion and possible centromeric shift in the largest pair No. 1 and a Robertsonian translocation between telocentric pairs No. 11 and 12, which led to the formation of a large subtelocentric pair (chromosome 9). A tandem fusion between a small metacentric (pair No. 8) and a part of the p-arm of large metacentric No. 2 gave rise to a large subtelocentric pair (No. 11) in 2n = 24/25 karyotypes (Fig. 7).
Molecular genetic studies point to the existence of eight highly divergent mitochondrial lineages among the shrews affiliated with the ‘cylindricauda’ group (five within S. bedfordiae, two in S. excelsus and one in S. cylindricauda) occurring on the eastern and southeastern edge of the QTP7. We did not aim to revise the intraspecific taxonomy of this group; however, it is worth noting that on the basis of the geographic origin and published genetic data25, all the karyotyped individuals presented here correspond to clade B, while those that have been reported by Moribe et al.26 and Motokawa et al.13 belong to other mitochondrial clades. Therefore, in this case, the molecular genetic differences match the karyotypic ones.
According to the recent phylogenetic analysis25, the Tibetan shrew belongs to the ‘minutus s.l.’ group together with S. minutissimus, S. gracillimus and a species endemic to Honshu Island, S. hosonoi. Nonetheless, karyotypic characteristics of S. gracillimus and S. minutissimus are close to those of the ‘caecutiens’ group but not those of the ‘minutus s.str.’ group16,28. Among these four species, S. gracillimus has a lower diploid number of chromosomes, 2n = 36, NFa = 6029, whereas both S. hosonoi30 and the S. thibetanus described here are characterised by the same number, 2n = 42, but differ in NFa: at 60 and 66, respectively. The karyotypic status of S. minutissimus is still not clear; 2n = 38 and 42 have been reported for the species from two distinct areas, Finland31 and Siberia32. Despite the absence of a 2n = 42 karyogram, in both cases, those authors reported33 that the karyotypes consist of mostly bi-armed autosomes and single-armed sex chromosomes with the same NFa, 72. It is worth noting that the S. thibetanus karyotype contains 10 bi-armed autosomes, which is the smallest number of these among the other three species. Except for our results on S. thibetanus, there are no data on the localisation of NORs in these species.
On the basis of molecular data, the Tibetan shrew has been estimated to have diverged from other members of ‘minutus s.l.’ (most likely from S. gracillimus) 2.0–2.5 million years ago (Mya)25. This age corresponds to the earliest possible time of QTP colonisation by the Tibetan shrew. The karyotypic data overall match the data from molecular genetic analysis indicating that S. thibetanus is affiliated with the eastern branch of the ‘minutus s.l.’ group25.
The latest multilocus nuclear and mitochondrial phylogeny25 of the nominal subgenus Sorex s.str. revealed that the ‘caecutiens’ species group is composed of five members: S. caecutiens, S. isodon, S. unguiculatus, S. shinto and S. cansulus. Among them, karyotypes of the first four species are known to be very similar (2n = 42, NFa = 64–66)16,34,35. The chromosomal set of the Gansu shrew S. cansulus has been unknown; here, for the first time, we demonstrated that this species has the same number of chromosomes, 2n = 42. A conventionally stained S. cansulus karyotype (NFa = 64) turned out to be quite similar in its morphological structure to species with NFa = 64 (S. isodon, S. unguiculatus and S. shinto). It has been documented that G-banding patterns are very conserved among S. caecutiens, S. shinto and S. unguiculatus karyotypes, which differ from each other by pericentric inversions29. The karyotype of S. caecutiens (NFa = 66) differs35 from these species by an additional pericentric inversion in pair No. 8 and a centromeric shift in pair No. 12. There are no data on differentially stained karyotypes of the other species.
In S. cansulus, NORs were detected for the first time in satellite regions of two small telocentric pairs, No. 19 and 20. The same localisation of NORs has been found in S. unguiculatus29. As Zima et al.16 have mentioned, ‘all species of this group with 42 chromosomes possess pronounced satellites in two small autosomal pairs’. Evidently, these autosomes bear NORs in all species, but only S. cansulus and S. unguiculatus karyotypes have been stained.
According to molecular data, the Gansu shrew separated from its most probable sister group (S. caecutiens) 1.5–2.0 Mya25, which is somewhat later in comparison with S. thibetanus. Consequently, one may theorise that the Gansu shrew is a more recent coloniser than the Tibetan shrew. Our karyotypic data overall match the data from molecular genetic analysis suggesting that S. cansulus belongs to the eastern branch of the ‘caecutiens s.l.’ group25.
Within the subfamily Soricinae, the tribe Anourosoricini is composed of four species20: Anourosorex assamensis Anderson, 1875, A. schmidi Petter, 1963, A. squamipes Milne-Edwards, 1872, and A. yamashinai Kuroda, 1935. Among them, karyotypic data have not been published for A. schmidi. A. yamashinai, endemic to Taiwan, has been studied using a set of differential stains and has 2n = 50, NFa = 9636, whereas only conventionally stained karyograms are available for A. squamipes (2n = 48, NFa = 92) collected in Fuleshan, Mianyang-shi, Sichuan Province, China19, and for A. assamensis from Tiddim Town of Chin State, western Myanmar (2n = 50, NFa = 96)37. Our results show that the structure of the A. squamipes routine karyotype does not differ from that reported previously: 2n = 48, NFa = 92. It has been demonstrated that the A. yamashinai karyotype19 contains two pairs of the large subtelocentrics that are missing in A. squamipes. Thus, species of the genus Anourosorex share a similarity of the karyotype, even though they are geographically distant from each other, as is the case, for example, for A. yamashinai (Taiwan) and A. assamensis (south-western China, south-eastern Tibet, north-eastern India and west-central Myanmar).
The taxonomic status of shrews of the genus Chodsigoa has changed many times. Previously, eight species have been recognised in the genus5,20, then new species, Chodsigoa hoffmanni sp. nov., was described on the basis of sequencing data from one mitochondrial and two nuclear genes8. Now nine species are attributed to the genus.
De Winton’s shrew Ch. hypsibia is endemic to China and occurs in central and southern provinces: south-eastern Qinghai, southern Gansu, southern Shaanxi, eastern Tibet, Sichuan, northern Yunnan and southern Anhui2. So far, karyotypic data on the genus Chodsigoa have been limited to one chromosome set that is described for a species endemic to Taiwan, Chodsigoa sodalis (2n = 44, NF = 88)38. The conventionally stained karyotype of this species consists of all bi-armed chromosomes; sex chromosomes have not been identified. The Ch. hypsibia karyotype stands out because all chromosomes are acrocentrics except one small metacentric pair of autosomes (chromosome 31) and an unpaired metacentric B chromosome (2n = 65, NFa = 66). On the basis of C-banding patterns, the X and Y sex chromosomes in the studied male were identified as a large acrocentric and medium acrocentric, respectively.
The large differences between the Ch. hypsibia (almost completely acrocentric) and Ch. sodalis (almost completely metacentric) karyotypes may be explained by the more ancient origin of Ch. hypsibia. To some extent, this notion is confirmed by large molecular genetic differences between Ch. hypsibia and most of other species of this genus. In the genus Episoriculus, closely related to Chodsigoa, there are also large differences in the number of metacentric and acrocentric chromosomes between E. caudatus with 2n = 60, NF = 118 (M + SM = 19, ST = 9, A = 1) and E. soluensis with 2n = 74, NF = 126 (M + SM = 12, ST = 13, A = 11)39. Those authors consider E. soluensis a subspecies of E. saсratus soluensis.
The lesser white-toothed shrew C. suaveolens inhabits a huge area, from Europe to Asia. The species is characterised by a mostly stable karyotype with 2n = 40, NF = 50, but some authors have reported chromosome sets 2n = 41–42, NF = 52, 54, which result from the presence of supernumerary (B) chromosomes (see review16). In a previous work, a 2n = 40, NF = 50 karyotype was identified in a female individual of C. suaveolens from the vicinity of the Goin Ba village in southern Gansu Province27. The specimen described here has 2n = 40 but a smaller number of chromosomal arms, NF = 48, owing to three bi-armed chromosome pairs instead of four. Unfortunately, highly condensed chromosomal arms in a low-quality chromosomal suspension did not allow us to clearly distinguish a possible fourth pair of bi-armed chromosomes. Thus, we cannot be completely sure that this specimen differs by a lower fundamental number of arms from those reported previously.
In a previous report, we showed that lesser white-toothed shrews from the QTP are close relatives of Cr. suaveolens s.str. (p-distance ~ 3%)27. Therefore, we can assume that this species is a relatively recent coloniser of the QTP and has not managed to achieve considerable genetic differentiation.