IS THE GUINEA-PIG A RODENT

被引:272
作者
GRAUR, D
HIDE, WA
LI, WH
机构
[1] UNIV TEXAS, CTR DEMOG & POPULAT GENET, POB 20334, HOUSTON, TX 77225 USA
[2] TEL AVIV UNIV, GEORGE S WISE FAC LIFE SCI, DEPT ZOOL, IL-69978 TEL AVIV, ISRAEL
[3] BAYLOR UNIV, DEPT CELL BIOL, HOUSTON, TX 77030 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1038/351649a0
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
THE guinea-pig (Cavia porcellus), traditionally classified as a New World hystricomorph rodent, often shows anomalous morphological and molecular features in comparison with other eutherian mammals 1-14. For example, its insulin differs from that of other mammals in anabolic and growth-promoting activities and in its capability to form hexamers 5, 6. Indeed, the literature about the molecular evolution of guinea-pigs abounds in references to 'convergent evolution', 'extremely rapid rates of substitution', and 'unique evolutionary mechanisms'. These claims are based on the assumption that the guinea-pig is a rodent. Our phylogenetic analyses of amino-acid sequence data, however, imply that the guinea-pig diverged before the separation of the primates and the artiodactyls from the myomorph rodents (rats and mice). If true, then the myomorphs and the caviomorphs do not constitute a natural clade, and the Caviomorpha (or the Histricomorpha) should be elevated in taxonomical rank and regarded as a separate mammalian order distinct from the Rodentia. If, as suggested by recent data 15, 16, the myomorphs branched off before the divergence among the carnivores, lagomorphs, artiodactyls and primates, then the new order would represent an early divergence in eutherian radiation.
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页码:649 / 652
页数:4
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