Further evidence for the variability of the 18S rDNA loci in the family Tingidae (Hemiptera, Heteroptera)

Comp Cytogenet. 2016 Oct 14;10(4):517-528. doi: 10.3897/CompCytogen.v10i4.9631. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

As of now, within the lace bug family Tingidae (Cimicomorpha), only 1.5% of the species described have been cytogenetically studied. In this paper, male karyotypes of Stephanitis caucasica, Stephanitis pyri, Physatocheila confinis, Lasiacantha capucina, Dictyla rotundata and Dictyla echii were studied using FISH mapping with an 18S rDNA marker. The results show variability: the major rDNA sites are predominantly located on a pair of autosomes but occasionally on the X and Y chromosomes. All currently available data on the distribution of the major rDNA in the Tingidae karyotypes are summarized and shortly discussed. Our main concern is to clarify whether the chromosomal position of rDNA loci can contribute to resolving the phylogenetic relationships among the Tingidae taxa.

Keywords: Cimicomorpha; FISH; Hemiptera; Karyotype; lace bugs; major rDNA cluster.