期刊
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 26, 期 11, 页码 2427-2440出版社
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msp169
关键词
mutation rate; genomic; mitochondrial; whale; cetacean
资金
- New Zealand Royal Society [01-UOA-070]
- Pew Charitable Trust
- Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico
- Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia
Baleen whales are the largest animals that have ever lived. To develop an improved estimation of substitution rate for nuclear and mitochondrial DNA for this taxon, we implemented a relaxed-clock phylogenetic approach using three fossil calibration dates: the divergence between odontocetes and mysticetes similar to 34 million years ago (Ma), between the balaenids and balaenopterids similar to 28 Ma, and the time to most recent common ancestor within the Balaenopteridae similar to 12 Ma. We examined seven mitochondrial genomes, a large number of mitochondrial control region sequences (219 haplotypes for 465 bp) and nine nuclear introns representing five species of whales, within which multiple species-specific alleles were sequenced to account for within-species diversity (1-15 for each locus). The total data set represents >1.65 Mbp of mitogenome and nuclear genomic sequence. The estimated Substitution rate for the humpback whale control region (3.9%/million years, My) was higher than previous estimates for baleen whales but slow relative to other mammal species with similar generation times (e.g., human-chimp mean rate > 20%/My). The mitogenomic third codon position rate was also slow relative to other mammals (mean estimate 1%/My compared with a mammalian average of 9.8%/My for the cytochrome h gene). The mean nuclear genomic substitution rate (0.05%/My) was substantially slower than average synonymous estimate,,, for other mammals (0.21-0.37%/My across a range of studies). The nuclear and mitogenome rate estimates for baleen whales were thus roughly consistent with all 8- to 10-fold slowing due to a combination of large body size and long generation times. Surprisingly, despite the large data set of nuclear intron sequences, there was only weak and conflicting Support for alternate hypotheses about the phylogeny of balaenopterid whales, suggesting that interspecies introgressions or a rapid radiation has obscured species relationships in the nuclear genome.
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