Patterns of nucleotide substitution in Drosophila and mammalian genomes

被引:129
作者
Petrov, DA
Hartl, DL
机构
[1] Harvard Univ Soc Fellows, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
[2] Harvard Univ, Dept Organism & Evolut Biol, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1073/pnas.96.4.1475
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
To estimate patterns of molecular evolution of unconstrained DNA sequences, we used maximum parsimony to separate phylogenetic trees of a non-long terminal repeat retrotransposable element into either internal branches, representing mainly the constrained evolution of active lineages, or into terminal branches, representing mainly nonfunctional "dead-on-arrival" copies that are unconstrained by selection and evolve as pseudogenes. The pattern of nucleotide substitutions in unconstrained sequences is expected to be congruent with the pattern of point mutation. We examined the retrotransposon Helena in the Drosophila virilis species group (subgenus Drosophila) and the Drosophila melanogaster species subgroup (subgenus Sophophora). The patterns of point mutation are indistinguishable, suggesting considerable stability over evolutionary time (40-60 million years). The relative frequencies of different point mutations are unequal, but the "transition bias" results largely from an approximate to 2-fold excess of G.C to A.T substitutions. Spontaneous mutation is biased toward A.T base pairs, with an expected mutational equilibrium of approximate to 65% A + T (quite similar to that of long introns), These data also enable the first detailed comparison of patterns of point mutations in Drosophila and mammals. Although the patterns are different, all of the statistical significance comes from a much greater rate of G.C to A.T substitution in mammals, probably because of methylated cytosine "hotspots," When the G.C to AT substitutions are discounted, the remaining differences are considerably reduced and not statistically significant.
引用
收藏
页码:1475 / 1479
页数:5
相关论文
共 23 条
[1]  
AKASHI H, 1995, GENETICS, V139, P1067
[2]   Codon bias evolution in Drosophila.: Population genetics of mutation-selection drift [J].
Akashi, H .
GENE, 1997, 205 (1-2) :269-278
[3]   Strand asymmetries in DNA evolution [J].
Francino, MP ;
Ochman, H .
TRENDS IN GENETICS, 1997, 13 (06) :240-245
[4]   PATTERNS OF NUCLEOTIDE SUBSTITUTION IN PSEUDOGENES AND FUNCTIONAL GENES [J].
GOJOBORI, T ;
LI, WH ;
GRAUR, D .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION, 1982, 18 (05) :360-369
[5]   DELETIONS IN PROCESSED PSEUDOGENES ACCUMULATE FASTER IN RODENTS THAN IN HUMANS [J].
GRAUR, D ;
SHUALI, Y ;
LI, WH .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION, 1989, 28 (04) :279-285
[6]   PROCESSED PSEUDOGENES IN DROSOPHILA [J].
JEFFS, P ;
ASHBURNER, M .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1991, 244 (1310) :151-159
[7]  
KLIMAN RM, 1993, MOL BIOL EVOL, V10, P1239
[8]   NONRANDOMNESS OF POINT MUTATION AS REFLECTED IN NUCLEOTIDE SUBSTITUTIONS IN PSEUDOGENES AND ITS EVOLUTIONARY IMPLICATIONS [J].
LI, WH ;
WU, CI ;
LUO, CC .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION, 1984, 21 (01) :58-71
[9]   PSEUDOGENES AS A PARADIGM OF NEUTRAL EVOLUTION [J].
LI, WH ;
GOJOBORI, T ;
NEI, M .
NATURE, 1981, 292 (5820) :237-239
[10]   INSTABILITY AND DECAY OF THE PRIMARY STRUCTURE OF DNA [J].
LINDAHL, T .
NATURE, 1993, 362 (6422) :709-715