3 results on '"pecora"'
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2. Evolutionary histories of highly repeated DNA families among the Artiodactyla (Mammalia)
- Author
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William S. Modi, Daniel S. Gallagher, and James E. Womack
- Subjects
Boselaphini ,Bovini ,Satellite DNA ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Zoology ,Chromosomal rearrangement ,Subspecies ,DNA, Satellite ,Evolution, Molecular ,Monophyly ,Species Specificity ,Genetics ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Cells, Cultured ,In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence ,Phylogeny ,Artiodactyla ,Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid ,biology ,Giraffidae ,Base Sequence ,Fibroblasts ,biology.organism_classification ,Blotting, Southern ,Karyotyping ,Pecora - Abstract
Six highly repeated DNA families were analyzed using Southern blotting and fluorescence in situ hybridization in a comparative study of 46 species of artiodactyls belonging to seven of the eight extant taxonomic families. Two of the repeats, the dispersed bovine-Pst family and the localized 1.715 component, were found to have the broadest taxonomic distributions, being present in all pecoran ruminants (Giraffidae, Cervidae, Antilocapridae, and Bovidae), indicating that these repeats may be 25-40 million years old. Different 1.715 restriction patterns were observed in different taxonomic families, indicating that independent concerted evolution events have homogenized different motifs in different lineages. The other four satellite arrays were restricted to the Bovini and sometimes to the related Boselaphini and Tragelaphini. Results reveal that among the two compound satellites studied, the two components of the 1.711a originated simultaneously, whereas the two components of the 1.711b originated at two different historical times, perhaps as many as 15 million years apart. Systematic conclusions support the monophyly of the infraorder Pecora, the monophyly of the subfamily Bovinae (containing the Boselaphini, Bovini, and Tragelaphini), an inability to resolve any interrelationships among the other tribes of bovids, paraphyly of the genus Bos with respect to Bison, and a lack of molecular variation among two morphologically and ecologically distinct subspecies of African buffaloes (Syncerus caffer cafer and S. c. nanus). Cytogenetically, a reduction in diploid chromosome numbers through centric fusion in derived karyotypes is accompanied by a loss of centromeric satellite DNA. The nilgai karyotype contains an apparent dicentric chromosome as evidenced by the sites of 1.715 hybridization. Telomeric sequences have been translocated to the centromeres without concomitant chromosomal rearrangement in Thompson's gazelle.
- Published
- 1996
3. Molecular evolution of the mitochondrial 12S rRNA in Ungulata (mammalia)
- Author
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Emmanuel J. P. Douzery and François Catzeflis
- Subjects
Mitochondrial DNA ,RNA, Mitochondrial ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Zoology ,Ruminantia ,Evolution, Molecular ,Monophyly ,Species Specificity ,Molecular evolution ,Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid ,Genetics ,Animals ,Hyraxes ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Perissodactyla ,Phylogeny ,Artiodactyla ,Gene Rearrangement ,Mammals ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Base Sequence ,Models, Genetic ,Ribosomal RNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Mitochondria ,Marsupialia ,Tree hyrax ,RNA, Ribosomal ,Nucleic Acid Conformation ,RNA ,Sequence Alignment ,Pecora - Abstract
The complete 12S rRNA gene has been sequenced in 4 Ungulata (hoofed eutherians) and 1 marsupial and compared to 38 available mammalian sequences in order to investigate the molecular evolution of the mitochondrial small-subunit ribosomal RNA molecule. Ungulata were represented by one artiodactyl (the collared peccary, Tayassu tajacu, suborder Suiformes), two perissodactyls (the Grevy's zebra, Equus grevyi, suborder Hippomorpha; the white rhinoceros, Ceratotherium simum, suborder Ceratomorpha), and one hyracoid (the tree hyrax, Dendrohyrax dorsalis). The fifth species was a marsupial, the eastern gray kangaroo (Macropus giganteus). Several transition/transversion biases characterized the pattern of changes between mammalian 12S rRNA molecules. A bias toward transitions was found among 12S rRNA sequences of Ungulata, illustrating the general bias exhibited by ribosomal and protein-encoding genes of the mitochondrial genome. The derivation of a mammalian 12S rRNA secondary structure model from the comparison of 43 eutherian and marsupial sequences evidenced a pronounced bias against transversions in stems. Moreover, transversional compensatory changes were rare events within double-stranded regions of the ribosomal RNA. Evolutionary characteristics of the 12S rRNA were compared with those of the nuclear 18S and 28S rRNAs. From a phylogenetic point of view, transitions, transversions and indels in stems as well as transversional and indels events in loops gave congruent results for comparisons within orders. Some compensatory changes in double-stranded regions and some indels in single-stranded regions also constituted diagnostic events. The 12S rRNA molecule confirmed the monophyly of infraorder Pecora and order Cetacea and demonstrated the monophyly of suborder Suiformes. However, the monophyly of the suborder Ruminantia was not supported, and the branching pattern between Cetacea and the artiodactyl suborders Ruminantia and Suiformes was not established. The monophyly of the order Perissodactyla was evidenced, but the relationships between Artiodactyla, Cetacea, and Perissodactyla remained unresolved. Nevertheless, we found no support for a Perissodactyla + Hyracoidea clade, neither with distance approach, nor with parsimony reconstruction. The 12S rRNA was useful to solve intraordinal relationships among Ungulata, but it seemed to harbor too few informative positions to decipher the bushlike radiation of some Ungulata orders, an event which has most probably occurred in a short span of time between 55 and 70 MYA.
- Published
- 1995
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