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Molecular Biology and Evolution, Vol 16, 1528-1534, Copyright © 1999 by Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Association of intron phases with conservation at splice site sequences and evolution of spliceosomal introns

M Long and M Deutsch
Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA. mlong@midway.uchicago.edu

How exon-intron structures of eukaryotic genes evolved under various evolutionary forces remains unknown. The phases of spliceosomal introns (the placement of introns with respect to reading frame) provide an opportunity to approach this question. When a large number of nuclear introns in protein-coding genes were analyzed, it was found that most introns were of phase 0, which keeps codons intact. We found that the phase distribution of spliceosomal introns is strongly correlated with the sequence conservation of splice signals in exons; the relatively underrepresented phase 2 introns are associated with the lowest conservation, the relatively overrepresented phase 0 introns display the highest conservation, and phase 1 introns are intermediate. Given the detrimental effect of mutations in exon sequences near splice sites as found in molecular experiments, the underrepresentation of phase 2 introns may be the result of deleterious-mutation-driven intron loss, suggesting a possible genetic mechanism for the evolution of intron- exon structures.
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