Substitution rate variation among sites in mitochondrial hypervariable region I of humans and chimpanzees

被引:104
|
作者
Excoffier, L
Yang, ZH
机构
[1] UCL, Galton Lab, Dept Biol, London NW1 2HE, England
[2] Univ Geneva, Dept Anthropol, Genet & Biometry Lab, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland
关键词
D-loop; mitochondrial DNA; humans; chimpanzees; mutation rate variation; gamma distribution;
D O I
10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a026046
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Mitochondrial D-loop hypervariable region I (HVI) sequences are widely used in human molecular evolutionary studies, and therefore accurate assessment of rate heterogeneity among sites is essential. We used the maximum-likelihood method to estimate the gamma shape parameter alpha for variable substitution rates among sites for HVI from humans and chimpanzees to provide estimates for future studies. The complete data of 839 humans and 224 chimpanzees, as well as many subsets of these data, were analyzed to examine the effect of sequence sampling. The effects of the genealogical tree and the nucleotide substitution model were also examined. The transition/ transversion rate ratio (kappa) is estimated to be about 25, although much larger and biased estimates were also obtained from small data sets at low divergences. Estimates of alpha were 0.28-0.39 for human data sets of different sizes and 0.20-0.39 for data sets including different chimpanzee subspecies. The combined data set of both species gave estimates of 0.42-0.45. While all those estimates suggest highly variable substitution rates among sites, smaller samples tend to give smaller estimates of alpha. Possible causes for this pattern were examined, such as biases in the estimation procedure and shifts in the rate distribution along certain lineages. Computer simulations suggest that the estimation procedure is quite reliable for large trees but can be biased for small samples at low divergences. Thus, an alpha of 0.4 appears suitable for both humans and chimpanzees. Estimates of alpha can be affected by the nucleotide sites included in the data, the overall tree length (the amount of sequence divergence), the number of rate classes used for the estimation, and to a lesser extent, the included sequences. The genealogical tree, the substitution model, and demographic processes such as population expansion do not have much effect.
引用
收藏
页码:1357 / 1368
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Polymorphism of Hypervariable Segment I of Mitochondrial DNA in Three Ethnic Populations from the Volga–Ural Region
    M. A. Bermisheva
    T. V. Viktorova
    O. V. Belyaeva
    S. A. Limborska
    E.K. Khusnutdinova
    Russian Journal of Genetics, 2001, 37 : 932 - 938
  • [42] Nonsynonymous Substitution Rate Heterogeneity in the Peptide-Binding Region Among Different HLA-DRB1 Lineages in Humans
    Yasukochi, Yoshiki
    Satta, Yoko
    G3-GENES GENOMES GENETICS, 2014, 4 (07): : 1217 - 1226
  • [43] The link between mitochondrial DNA hypervariable segment I heteroplasmy and ageing among genetically unrelated Latvians
    Pliss, Liana
    Brakmanis, Andis
    Ranka, Renate
    Elferts, Didzis
    Krumina, Astrida
    Baumanis, Viesturs
    EXPERIMENTAL GERONTOLOGY, 2011, 46 (07) : 560 - 568
  • [44] MAXIMUM-LIKELIHOOD-ESTIMATION OF THE HETEROGENEITY OF SUBSTITUTION RATE AMONG NUCLEOTIDE SITES
    GU, X
    FU, YX
    LI, WH
    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 1995, 12 (04) : 546 - 557
  • [45] Extensive variation in nucleotide substitution rate and gene/intron loss in mitochondrial genomes of Pelargonium
    Choi, KyoungSu
    Weng, Mao-Lun
    Ruhlman, Tracey A.
    Jansen, Robert K.
    MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION, 2021, 155
  • [46] Forensic genetic analysis of mitochondrial DNA hypervariable region I/II sequences: An expanded Korean population database
    Jin, HJ
    Kwak, KD
    Hong, SB
    Shin, DJ
    Han, MS
    Tyler-Smith, C
    Kim, W
    FORENSIC SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL, 2006, 158 (2-3) : 125 - 130
  • [47] Polymorphism of hypervariable segment I of mitochondrial DNA in three ethnic populations from the Volga-Ural region
    Bermisheva, MA
    Viktorova, TV
    Belyaeva, OV
    Limborska, SA
    Khusnutdinova, EK
    RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF GENETICS, 2001, 37 (08) : 932 - 938
  • [48] Genetic diversity and haplogroups distributions of Kampung chickens using hypervariable-I mitochondrial DNA control region
    Zein, M. Syamsul Arifin
    Sulandari, S.
    JURNAL ILMU TERNAK DAN VETERINER, 2012, 17 (02) : 120 - 131
  • [49] A hidden Markov Model approach to variation among sites in rate of evolution
    Felsenstein, J
    Churchill, GA
    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 1996, 13 (01) : 93 - 104
  • [50] Signatures of recurrent mutations at single nucleotide polymorphism sites in the hypervariable domains of the mitochondrial control region and their implications for evolutionary studies.
    Chakraborty, R
    Wang, N
    Jin, L
    Deka, R
    Kimmel, M
    Budowle, B
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY, 2001, : 49 - 49