Literature DB >> 11158383

Genomic gigantism: DNA loss is slow in mountain grasshoppers.

D Bensasson1, D A Petrov, D X Zhang, D L Hartl, G M Hewitt.   

Abstract

Several studies have shown DNA loss to be inversely correlated with genome size in animals. These studies include a comparison between Drosophila and the cricket, Laupala, but there has been no assessment of DNA loss in insects with very large genomes. Podisma pedestris, the brown mountain grasshopper, has a genome over 100 times as large as that of Drosophila and 10 times as large as that of Laupala. We used 58 paralogous nuclear pseudogenes of mitochondrial origin to study the characteristics of insertion, deletion, and point substitution in P. pedestris and Italopodisma. In animals, these pseudogenes are "dead on arrival"; they are abundant in many different eukaryotes, and their mitochondrial origin simplifies the identification of point substitutions accumulated in nuclear pseudogene lineages. There appears to be a mononucleotide repeat within the 643-bp pseudogene sequence studied that acts as a strong hot spot for insertions or deletions (indels). Because the data for other insect species did not contain such an unusual region, hot spots were excluded from species comparisons. The rate of DNA loss relative to point substitution appears to be considerably and significantly lower in the grasshoppers studied than in Drosophila or Laupala. This suggests that the inverse correlation between genome size and the rate of DNA loss can be extended to comparisons between insects with large or gigantic genomes (i.e., Laupala and Podisma). The low rate of DNA loss implies that in grasshoppers, the accumulation of point mutations is a more potent force for obscuring ancient pseudogenes than their loss through indel accumulation, whereas the reverse is true for Drosophila. The main factor contributing to the difference in the rates of DNA loss estimated for grasshoppers, crickets, and Drosophila appears to be deletion size. Large deletions are relatively rare in Podisma and Italopodisma.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11158383     DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a003798

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Evol        ISSN: 0737-4038            Impact factor:   16.240


  41 in total

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5.  Incongruent patterns of local and global genome size evolution in cotton.

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Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2004-07-15       Impact factor: 9.043

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8.  Analysis of retrotransposon structural diversity uncovers properties and propensities in angiosperm genome evolution.

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9.  Many species in one: DNA barcoding overestimates the number of species when nuclear mitochondrial pseudogenes are coamplified.

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Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2008-08-29       Impact factor: 11.205

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