Molecular Biology and Evolution, Vol 2, 175-188, Copyright © 1985 by Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution
BC Lamb
Base ratios and total DNA amounts can vary substantially between and within
higher taxa and genera, and even within species. Gene conversion is one of
several mechanisms that could cause such changes. For base substitutions,
disparity in conversion direction is accompanied by an equivalent disparity
in base ratio at the heterozygous site. Disparity in the direction of gene
conversion at meiosis is common and can be extreme. For transitions (which
give purine [R]/pyrimidine [Y] mispairs) and for transversions giving
unlike R/R and Y/Y mispairs in hybrid DNA, this disparity could give slow
but systematic changes in G + C percentage. For transversions giving like
R/R and Y/Y mispairs, it could change AT/TA and CG/GC ratios. From the
extent of correction direction disparity, one can deduce properties of
repair enzymes, such as the ability (1) to excise preferentially the purine
from one mispair and the pyrimidine from the other for two different R/Y
mispairs from a single heterozygous site and (2) to excise one base
preferentially from unlike R/R or Y/Y mispairs. Frame-shifts usually show
strong disparity in conversion direction, with preferential cutting of the
nonlooped or the looped-out strand of the nonpair in heterozygous h-DNA.
The opposite directions of disparity for frame-shifts and their intragenic
suppressors as Ascobolus suggest that repair enzymes have a strong,
systematic bias as to which strand is cut. The conversion spectra of
mutations induced with different mutagens suggest that the nonlooped strand
is preferentially cut, so that base additions generally convert to mutant
and deletions generally convert to wild-type forms. Especially in
nonfunctional or noncoding DNA, this could cause a general increase in DNA
amounts. Conversion disparity, selection, mutation, and other processes
interact, affecting rates of change in base ratios and total DNA.
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
The effects of mispair and nonpair correction in hybrid DNA on base ratios (G + C content) and total amounts of DNA
Department of Pure and Applied Biology, Imperial College, London, England.
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