Molecular Biology and Evolution, Vol 16, 1511-1520, Copyright © 1999 by Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution
AM Baldo, DH Les and LD Strausbaugh
Simplified DNA sequence acquisition has provided many new data sets that
are useful for phylogenetic reconstruction, including single- and
multiple-copy nuclear and organellar genes. Although transcribed regions
receive much attention, nontranscribed regions have recently been added to
the repertoire of sequences suitable for phylogenetic studies, especially
for closely related taxa. We evaluated the efficacy of a small portion of
the histone repeat for phylogenetic reconstruction among Drosophila
species. Histone repeats in invertebrates offer distinct advantages similar
to those of widely used ribosomal repeats. First, the units are tandemly
repeated and undergo concerted evolution. Second, histone repeats include
both highly conserved coding and variable intergenic regions. This
composition facilitates application of "universal" primers spanning
potentially informative sites. We examined a small region of the histone
repeat, including the intergenic spacer segments of coding regions from the
divergently transcribed H2A and H2B histone genes. The spacer (about 230
bp) exists as a mosaic with highly conserved functional motifs interspersed
with rapidly diverging regions; the former aid in alignment of the spacer.
There are no ambiguities in alignment of coding regions. Coding and
noncoding regions were analyzed together and separately for phylogenetic
information. Parsimony, distance, and maximum-likelihood methods
successfully retrieve the corroborated phylogeny for the taxa examined.
This study demonstrates the resolving power of a small histone region which
may now be added to the growing collection of phylogenetically useful DNA
sequences.
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Potentials and limitations of histone repeat sequences for phylogenetic reconstruction of Sophophora
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs 06269-2131, USA.
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