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Vol. 95, Issue 1, 219-223, January 6, 1998 (intron-exon structure / dicodon usage)
* Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, The Biological
Laboratories, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138; and
Contributed by Walter Gilbert, November 13, 1997
The coding sequence at the boundaries of exons flanking nuclear
introns shows some degree of conservation. To the extent that such
sequences might be recognized by the splicing machinery, this
conservation may be a derived result of evolution for efficient splicing. Alternatively, such conserved sequences might be remnants of
proto-splice sites, which might have existed early in eukaryotic genes
and served as the targets for the insertion of introns, as has been
proposed by the introns-late theory. The distribution of intron phases,
the position of the intron within a codon, is biased with an
over-representation of phase 0 introns. Could any distribution of
proto-splice sites account for today's intron phase distribution?
Here, we examine the dicodon usage in six model organisms, based on
current sequences in the GenBank database, and predict the phase
distribution that would be expected if introns had been inserted into
proto-splice sites. However, these predictions differ between the
various model organisms and disagree with the observed intron phase
distributions. Thus, we reject the hypothesis that introns are inserted
into hypothetical proto-splice sites. Finally, we analyze the sequences
around the splice sites of introns in all six of the species to show
that the actual conservation of sequence in exon regions near introns
is very small and differs considerably between these species, which is
inconsistent with a general proto-splice sites model.
Evolution
Relationship between "proto-splice sites" and intron
phases: Evidence from dicodon analysis
Falling Rain Genomics, Inc., Lincoln, MA 01773
Copyright © 1998 by The National Academy of Sciences 0027-8424/98/95219-5$2.00/0
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