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1.
Mol Biol Evol ; 28(3): 1183-91, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21059791

ABSTRACT

During the past two decades, evidence has accumulated of adaptive evolution within protein-coding genes in a variety of species. However, with the exception of Drosophila and humans, little is known about the extent of adaptive evolution in noncoding DNA. Here, we study regions upstream and downstream of protein-coding genes in the house mouse Mus musculus castaneus, a species that has a much larger effective population size (N(e)) than humans. We analyze polymorphism data for 78 genes from 15 wild-caught M. m. castaneus individuals and divergence to a closely related species, Mus famulus. We find high levels of nucleotide diversity and moderate levels of selective constraint in upstream and downstream regions compared with nonsynonymous sites of protein-coding genes. From the polymorphism data, we estimate the distribution of fitness effects (DFE) of new mutations and infer that most new mutations in upstream and downstream regions behave as effectively neutral and that only a small fraction is strongly negatively selected. We also estimate the fraction of substitutions that have been driven to fixation by positive selection (α) and the ratio of adaptive to neutral divergence (ω(α)). We find that α for upstream and downstream regions (∼ 10%) is much lower than α for nonsynonymous sites (∼ 50%). However, ω(α) estimates are very similar for nonsynonymous sites (∼ 10%) and upstream and downstream regions (∼ 5%). We conclude that negative selection operating in upstream and downstream regions of M. m. castaneus is weak and that the low values of α for upstream and downstream regions relative to nonsynonymous sites are most likely due to the presence of a higher proportion of neutrally evolving sites and not due to lower absolute rates of adaptive substitution.


Subject(s)
3' Flanking Region , 5' Flanking Region , DNA, Intergenic , Mice/genetics , Selection, Genetic , Amino Acid Substitution , Animals , DNA/genetics , DNA, Intergenic/analysis , DNA, Intergenic/biosynthesis , Evolution, Molecular , Genetic Drift , Humans , Mutation , Open Reading Frames , Polymorphism, Genetic , Population Density
2.
Mol Biol Evol ; 28(3): 1205-15, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21081479

ABSTRACT

Vertebrate genomes contain thousands of conserved noncoding elements (CNEs) that often function as tissue-specific enhancers. In this study, we have identified CNEs in human, dog, chicken, Xenopus, and four teleost fishes (zebrafish, stickleback, medaka, and fugu) using elephant shark, a cartilaginous vertebrate, as the base genome and investigated the evolution of these ancient vertebrate CNEs (aCNEs) in bony vertebrate lineages. Our analysis shows that aCNEs have been evolving at different rates in different bony vertebrate lineages. Although 78-83% of CNEs have diverged beyond recognition ("lost") in different teleost fishes, only 24% and 40% have been lost in the chicken and mammalian lineages, respectively. Relative rate tests of substitution rates in CNEs revealed that the teleost fish CNEs have been evolving at a significantly higher rate than those in other bony vertebrates. In the ray-finned fish lineage, 68% of aCNEs were lost before the divergence of the four teleosts. This implicates the "fish-specific" whole-genome duplication in the accelerated evolution and the loss of a large number of both copies of duplicated CNEs in teleost fishes. The aCNEs are rich in tissue-specific enhancers and thus many of them are likely to be evolutionarily constrained cis-regulatory elements. The rapid evolution of aCNEs might have affected the expression patterns driven by them. Transgenic zebrafish assay of some human CNE enhancers that have been lost in teleosts has indicated instances of conservation or changes in trans-acting factors between mammals and fishes.


Subject(s)
DNA, Intergenic , Fishes/genetics , Animals , Biological Evolution , Bone and Bones/physiology , Cartilage/physiology , Chickens/genetics , Conserved Sequence/genetics , DNA, Intergenic/analysis , DNA, Intergenic/biosynthesis , Dogs , Enhancer Elements, Genetic , Genome , Humans , Phylogeny , Species Specificity , Trans-Activators/genetics , Xenopus/genetics
3.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 29(21): 4441-51, 2001 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11691932

ABSTRACT

The alpha-proteobacterium Caulobacter crescentus possesses a developmental cell cycle that restricts chromosome replication to a stalked cell type. The proposed C.crescentus chromosome replication origin (Cori) lies between hemE and RP001, an unusual intergenic region not previously associated with bacterial replication origins, although a similar genomic arrangement is also present at the putative replication origin in the related bacterium Rickettsia prowazekii. The cloned Cori supports autonomous plasmid replication selectively in the stalked cell type implying that replication of the entire chromosome also initiates between hemE and RP001. To confirm this location, we applied the 2-D (N/N) agarose gel electrophoresis technique to resolve and identify chromosome replication intermediates throughout a 30 kb region spanning Cori. Replication initiation in Cori was uniquely characterized by an 'origin bubble and Y-arc' pattern and this observation was supported by simple replication fork 'Y-arc' patterns that characterized the regions flanking Cori. These replication forks originated bi-directionally from within Cori as determined by the fork direction assay. Therefore, chromosomal replication initiates from the unusual hemE/RP001 intergenic region that we propose represents a new class of replication origins.


Subject(s)
Caulobacter crescentus/genetics , Chromosomes, Bacterial/genetics , DNA Replication , DNA, Bacterial/biosynthesis , DNA, Intergenic/genetics , Replication Origin/genetics , Blotting, Southern , Caulobacter crescentus/cytology , Comet Assay , DNA Methylation , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , DNA, Intergenic/biosynthesis , Genes, Bacterial/genetics , Mutation/genetics , Restriction Mapping
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