Molecular clocks in reptiles: Life history influences rate of molecular evolution
Data(s) |
01/03/2002
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Resumo |
Life history has been implicated as a determinant of variation in rate of molecular evolution amongst vertebrate species because of a negative correlation between bode size and substitution rate for many Molecular data sets. Both the generality and the cause of the negative bode size trend have been debated, and the validity of key studies has been questioned (particularly concerning the failure to account for phylogenetic bias). In this study, a comparative method has been used to test for an association between a range of life-history variables-such as body size age at maturity, and clutch size-and DNA substitution rate for three genes (NADH4, cytochrome b, and c-mos). A negative relationship between body size and rate of molecular evolution was found for phylogenetically independent pairs of reptile species spanning turtles. lizards. snakes, crocodile, and tuatara. Although this Study was limited by the number of comparisons for which both sequence and lite-history data were available, the results, suggest that a negative bode size trend in rate of molecular evloution may be a general feature of reptile molecular evolution. consistent with similar studies of mammals and birds. This observation has important implications for uncovering the mechanisms of molecular evolution and warns against assuming that related lineages will share the same substitution rate (a local molecular clock) in order to date evolutionary divergences from DNA sequences. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution |
Palavras-Chave | #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Evolutionary Biology #Genetics & Heredity #Molecular Clock #Molecular Evolution #Generation Time Effect #Substitution Rate #Relative Rates #Comparative Method #Dna-sequence Evolution #Male-driven Evolution #Relative-rate Test #Generation-time #Metabolic-rate #Nucleotide Substitution #Mitochondrial-dna #Phylogenetic-relationships #Correlated Rates #Nuclear Genes #C1 #270208 Molecular Evolution #780105 Biological sciences |
Tipo |
Journal Article |