Evidence for time dependency of molecular rate estimates


Autoria(s): Ho, Simon Y.W.; Shapiro, Beth; Phillips, Matthew J.; Cooper, Alan; Drummond, Alexei J.
Data(s)

2007

Resumo

Long-term changes in the genetic composition of a population occur by the fixation of new mutations, a process known as substitution. The rate at which mutations arise in a population and the rate at which they are fixed are expected to be equal under neutral conditions (Kimura, 1968). Between the appearance of a new mutation and its eventual fate of fixation or loss, there will be a period in which it exists as a transient polymorphism in the population (Kimura and Ohta, 1971). If the majority of mutations are deleterious (and nonlethal), the fixation probabilities of these transient polymorphisms are reduced and the mutation rate will exceed the substitution rate (Kimura, 1983). Consequently, different apparent rates may be observed on different time scales of the molecular evolutionary process (Penny, 2005; Penny and Holmes, 2001). The substitution rate of the mitochondrial protein-coding genes of birds and mammals has been traditionally recognized to be about 0.01 substitutions/site/million years (Myr) (Brown et al., 1979; Ho, 2007; Irwin et al., 1991; Shields and Wilson, 1987), with the noncoding D-loop evolving several times more quickly (e.g., Pesole et al., 1992; Quinn, 1992). Over the past decade, there has been mounting evidence that instantaneous mutation rates substantially exceed substitution rates, in a range of organisms (e.g., Denver et al., 2000; Howell et al., 2003; Lambert et al., 2002; Mao et al., 2006; Mumm et al., 1997; Parsons et al., 1997; Santos et al., 2005). The immediate reaction to the first of these findings was that the polymorphisms generated by the elevated mutation rate are short-lived, perhaps extending back only a few hundred years (Gibbons, 1998; Macaulay et al., 1997). That is, purifying selection was thought to remove these polymorphisms very rapidly.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/50532/

Publicador

Oxford University Press

Relação

DOI:10.1080/10635150701435401

Ho, Simon Y.W., Shapiro, Beth, Phillips, Matthew J., Cooper, Alan, & Drummond, Alexei J. (2007) Evidence for time dependency of molecular rate estimates. Systematic Biology, 56(3), pp. 515-522.

Fonte

Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #060300 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY #060400 GENETICS #genetic composition #mutations #substitution
Tipo

Journal Article