The compositional patterns of the avian genomes and their evolutionary implications
β Scribed by Farida Kadi; Dominique Mouchiroud; Georgette Sabeur; Giorgio Bernardi
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 722 KB
- Volume
- 37
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-2844
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The compositional distributions of large (main-band) DNA fragments from eight birds belonging to eight different orders (including both paleognathous and neognathous species) are very broad and extremely close to each other. These findings, which are paralleled by the compositional similarity of homologous coding sequences and their codon positions, support the idea that birds are a monophyletic group.
The compositional distribution of third-codon positions of genes from chicken, the only avian species for which a relatively large number of coding sequences is known, is very broad and bimodal, the minor GC-richer peak reaching 100% GC. The very high compositional heterogeneity of avian genomes is accompanied (as in the case of mammalian genomes) by a very high speciation rate compared to cold-blooded vertebrates which are characterized by genomes that are much less heterogeneous. The higher GC levels attained by avian compared to mammalian genomes might be correlated with the higher body temperature (41--43Β°C) of birds compared to mammals (37Β°C).
A comparison of GC levels of coding sequences and codon positions from man and chicken revealed very close average GC levels and standard devia-
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