A genomic schism in birds revealed by phylogenetic analysis of DNA strings

被引:52
作者
Edwards, SV
Fertil, B
Giron, A
Deschavanne, PJ
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Dept Zool, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[2] Univ Washington, Burke Museum, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[3] INSERM, U494, F-75634 Paris, France
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
bioinformatics; CpG island; genomics; isochore; ratite;
D O I
10.1080/10635150290102285
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The molecular systematics of vertebrates has been based entirely on alignments of primary structures of macromolecules; however, higher order features of DNA sequences not used in traditional studies also contain valuable phylogenetic information. Recent molecular data sets conflict over the phylogenetic placement of flightless birds (ratites - paleognaths), but placement of this clade critically influences interpretation of character change in birds. To help resolve this issue, we applied a new bioinformatics approach to the largest molecular data set currently available. We distilled nearly one megabase G million base pairs) of heterogeneous avian genomic DNA from 20 birds and an alligator into genomic signatures, defined as the complete set of frequencies of short sequence motifs (strings), thereby providing a way to directly compare higher order features of nonhomologous DNA sequences. Phylogenetic analysis and principal component analysis of the signatures strongly support the traditional hypothesis of basal ratites and monophyly of the nonratite birds (neognaths) and imply that ratite genomes are linguistically primitive within birds, despite their base compositional similarity to neognath genomes. Our analyses show further that the phylogenetic signal of genomic signatures are strongest among deep splits within vertebrates. Despite clear problems with phylogenetic analysis of genomic signatures, our study raises intriguing issues about the biological and genomic differences that fundamentally differentiate paleognaths and neognaths.
引用
收藏
页码:599 / 613
页数:15
相关论文
共 71 条
[31]   Taxon sampling and the phylogenetic position of passeriformes:: Evidence from 916 avian cytochrome b sequences [J].
Johnson, KP .
SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY, 2001, 50 (01) :128-136
[32]   THE COMPOSITIONAL PATTERNS OF THE AVIAN GENOMES AND THEIR EVOLUTIONARY IMPLICATIONS [J].
KADI, F ;
MOUCHIROUD, D ;
SABEUR, G ;
BERNARDI, G .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION, 1993, 37 (05) :544-551
[33]   COMPARISONS OF EUKARYOTIC GENOMIC SEQUENCES [J].
KARLIN, S ;
LADUNGA, I .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1994, 91 (26) :12832-12836
[34]  
KARLIN S, 1995, TRENDS GENET, V11, P283
[35]   Compositional biases of bacterial genomes and evolutionary implications [J].
Karlin, S ;
Mrazek, J ;
Campbell, AM .
JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY, 1997, 179 (12) :3899-3913
[36]   Amino acid substitutions preserve protein folding by conserving steric and hydrophobicity properties [J].
Ladunga, I ;
Smith, RF .
PROTEIN ENGINEERING, 1997, 10 (03) :187-196
[37]   PHYLOGENETIC TREES CONSTRUCTED FROM HYDROPHOBICITY VALUES OF PROTEIN SEQUENCES [J].
LEUNISSEN, JAM ;
DEJONG, WW .
JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY, 1986, 119 (02) :189-196
[38]  
MARTIN AP, 1995, MOL BIOL EVOL, V12, P1124
[39]   A distant evolutionary relationship between bacterial sphingomyelinase and mammalian DNase I [J].
Matsuo, Y ;
Yamada, A ;
Tsukamoto, K ;
Tamura, HO ;
Ikezawa, H ;
Nakamura, H ;
Nishikawa, K .
PROTEIN SCIENCE, 1996, 5 (12) :2459-2467
[40]   Chicken microchromosomes are hyperacetylated, early replicating, and gene rich [J].
McQueen, HA ;
Siriaco, G ;
Bird, AP .
GENOME RESEARCH, 1998, 8 (06) :621-630