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  • Heterozygosity  (1)
  • Key words: Mutation pattern — Mutation rate — Regional effect — Sequence effect — Pseudogenes  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of molecular evolution 45 (1997), S. 216-226 
    ISSN: 1432-1432
    Keywords: Key words: Mutation pattern — Mutation rate — Regional effect — Sequence effect — Pseudogenes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract. We sequenced three argininosuccinate-synthetase-processed pseudogenes (ΨAS-A1, ΨAS-A3, ΨAS-3) and their noncoding flanking sequences in human, orangutan, baboon, and colobus. Our data showed that these pseudogenes were incorporated into the genome of the Old World monkeys after the divergence of the Old World and New World monkey lineages. These pseudogene flanking regions show variable mutation rates and patterns. The variation in the G/C to A/T mutation rate (u) can account for the unequal GC contents at equilibrium: 34.9, 36.9, and 41.7% in the pseudogene ΨAS-A1, ΨAS-A3, and ΨAS-3 flanking regions, respectively. The A/T to G/C mutation rate (v) seems stable and the u/v ratios equal 1.9, 1.7, and 1.4 in the flanking regions of ΨAS-A1, ΨAS-A3, and ΨAS-3, respectively. These ``regional'' variations of the mutation rate affect the evolution of the pseudogenes, too. The ratio u/v being greater than 1.0 in each case, the overall mutation rate in the GC-rich pseudogenes is, as expected, higher than in their GC-poor flanking regions. Moreover, a ``sequence effect'' has been found. In the three cases examined u and v are higher (at least 20%) in the pseudogene than in its flanking region—i.e., the pseudogene appears as mutation ``hot'' spots embedded in ``cold'' regions. This observation could be partly linked to the fact that the pseudogene flanking regions are long-standing unconstrained DNA sequences, whereas the pseudogenes were relieved of selection on their coding functions only around 30–40 million years ago. We suspect that relatively more mutable sites maintained unchanged during the evolution of the argininosuccinate gene are able to change in the pseudogenes, such sites being eliminated or rare in the flanking regions which have been void of strong selective constraints over a much longer period. Our results shed light on (1) the multiplicity of factors that tune the spontaneous mutation rate and (2) the impact of the genomic position of a sequence on its evolution.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of mathematical biology 10 (1980), S. 155-166 
    ISSN: 1432-1416
    Keywords: Heterozygosity ; Number of alleles ; Mutation and selection
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Mathematics
    Notes: Summary One of the major goals of population genetics is to discover the nature and amount of genetic variation in natural populations. Various measures, including the population heterozygosity at any locus and the number of alleles extant at the locus, have been used for this purpose. An important task of theoretical population genetics is thus to provide expressions for the mean values of these two quantities (when calculated from a sample of genes) for various models of selection, mutation and random drift. This aim has been achieved for the selectively neutral case, where all alleles at the locus are assumed to be selectively equivalent. It is, however, generally agreed that classes of (evolutionarily unimportant) selectively deleterious alleles exist, so that the neutral theory calculations should be extended to cover this case. This has previously been done only for extremely weak selection. In this paper we obtain, via the confluent hypergeometric function and three allied functions, concise and simple exact and approximate formulae for the means of the above measures of population variation for arbitrary selective values. These all derive from the allelic “frequency spectrum”, which is of independent interest in assessing likely models of population variation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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