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Molecular Biology and Evolution, Vol 14, 942-950, Copyright © 1997 by Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Molecular evolution of the Amy multigenes in the subgenus Sophophora of Drosophila [published erratum appears in Mol Biol Evol 1997 Dec;14(12):1338]

N Inomata, H Tachida and T Yamazaki
Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan.

Molecular evolution of the Amy multigenes in Drosophila was investigated using PCR amplification. Twenty-five partial Amy sequences from 13 species belonging mainly to the subgenus Sophophora were determine, and a molecular phylogeny of the Amy genes in Drosophila was constructed, together with published Amy sequences. Clustering of species are mostly consistent with the traditional classification and that inferred from other genes. From sequence divergence between PCR products, several species, including D. elegans and D. fuyamai, were suggested to have multiple copies of the Amy genes. The loss of an intron took place at least three times after the Sophophora radiation. In order to investigate the mechanism of sequence evolution, the numbers of amino acid replacement and synonymous substitutions in five lineages were estimated. The heterogeneity in the relative numbers of synonymous and replacement substitutions among the lineages was found. Possible roles of selection in the sequence evolution of the Amy gene are discussed.
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