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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Accelerated evolution and Muller's rachet in endosymbiotic bacteria.

Nancy A. Moran
- 02 Apr 1996 - 
- Vol. 93, Iss: 7, pp 2873-2878
TLDR
Polypeptides for all Buchnera genes analyzed have accumulated amino acids with codon families rich in A+T, supporting the hypothesis that substitutions are deleterious in terms of polypeptide function, and the observation that the speedup is concentrated at nonsynonymous sites is contradicted.
Abstract
Many bacteria live only within animal cells and infect hosts through cytoplasmic inheritance. These endosymbiotic lineages show distinctive population structure, with small population size and effectively no recombination. As a result, endosymbionts are expected to accumulate mildly deleterious mutations. If these constitute a substantial proportion of new mutations, endosymbionts will show (i) faster sequence evolution and (ii) a possible shift in base composition reflecting mutational bias. Analyses of 16S rDNA of five independently derived endosymbiont clades show, in every case, faster evolution in endosymbionts than in free-living relatives. For aphid endosymbionts (genus Buchnera), coding genes exhibit accelerated evolution and unusually low ratios of synonymous to nonsynonymous substitutions compared to ratios for the same genes for enterics. This concentration of the rate increase in nonsynonymous substitutions is expected under the hypothesis of increased fixation of deleterious mutations. Polypeptides for all Buchnera genes analyzed have accumulated amino acids with codon families rich in A+T, supporting the hypothesis that substitutions are deleterious in terms of polypeptide function. These observations are best explained as the result of Muller's ratchet within small asexual populations, combined with mutational bias. In light of this explanation, two observations reported earlier for Buchnera, the apparent loss of a repair gene and the overproduction of a chaperonin, may reflect compensatory evolution. An alternative hypothesis, involving selection on genomic base composition, is contradicted by the observation that the speedup is concentrated at nonsynonymous sites.

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Heat-shock proteins, molecular chaperones, and the stress response: evolutionary and ecological physiology

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Toward Automatic Reconstruction of a Highly Resolved Tree of Life

TL;DR: An automatable procedure for reconstructing the tree of life with branch lengths comparable across all three domains is developed, revealing interdomain discrepancies in taxonomic classification and suggesting a thermophilic last universal common ancestor.
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Genomics and Evolution of Heritable Bacterial Symbionts

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Evolution experiments with microorganisms: the dynamics and genetic bases of adaptation.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the dynamics of evolutionary adaptation, the genetic bases of adaptation, tradeoffs and the environmental specificity of adaptation and the origin and evolutionary consequences of mutators.
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Cloned pigs produced by nuclear transfer from adult somatic cells

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References
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Book

Molecular Evolutionary Genetics

Masatoshi Nei
TL;DR: Recent developments of statistical methods in molecular phylogenetics are reviewed and it is shown that the mathematical foundations of these methods are not well established, but computer simulations and empirical data indicate that currently used methods produce reasonably good phylogenetic trees when a sufficiently large number of nucleotides or amino acids are used.
Book

The Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution

Motoo Kimura
TL;DR: The neutral theory as discussed by the authors states that the great majority of evolutionary changes at the molecular level are caused not by Darwinian selection but by random drift of selectively neutral mutants, which has caused controversy ever since.

The neutral theory of molecular evolution.

Motoo Kimura
TL;DR: The neutral theory as mentioned in this paper states that the great majority of evolutionary changes at the molecular level are caused not by Darwinian selection but by random drift of selectively neutral mutants, which has caused controversy ever since.
Book

Organelle Genes and Genomes

TL;DR: Part I: Introduction to Chloroplasts and Mitochondria Part II: Evolution and Organization of Organelle Genomes Part III: Organelle Genetics 7: Model Systems and Gene Manipulation 8: Transmission and Compatibility of Organelles 9: Intracellular Genetics of Organlles 10: Introns, Mobile Elements and Plasmids 11: Mitochondrial Disease Part IV: Expression and Biogenesis 12: Transcription and mRNA Processing in Organelle 13: Protein Synthesis in OrganellES 14: Reading and Editing Messages in Chloroplast Biogenesis 15: Protein Target
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