Making a robust biomolecular time scale for phylogenetic studies.

Protist

Physics Department, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244-1130, USA.

Published: April 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • The evolution of informational molecular sequences relies on viable alternatives, mutation rates, and time, influenced by selection pressures.
  • Most biomolecular clocks operate on the assumption that mutations occur uniformly and that certain nucleotide sequences remain constant, but refining these assumptions can lead to a more accurate understanding of evolution.
  • The document suggests that an improved evolutionary clock could enhance our understanding of phylogeny and provide a better timescale for evolutionary events.

Article Abstract

The further evolution of informational molecular sequences should depend on the number of viable alternatives possible for the sequences as set by selection, the unrepaired mutation rate, and time. Most biomolecular clocks are based on Kimura's nearly neutral mutation random-drift hypothesis. This clock assumes that informational sequences are in equilibrium, i.e., the nucleotides mutate at a uniform rate and the number of nucleotides unconstrained by selection remains constant. Correcting for deviations from these assumptions should produce a more accurate clock. Informational molecules probably formed from polynucleotides having some other function such as nitrogen or nucleotide storage, thus being initially functionally unselected. At any time the rate of development of functionality in a protein may be expected to be proportional to the number of viable alternatives of sequence in its potentially interacting regions. Assuming the rate of unrepaired mutations is constant, these clocks should exponentially slow as they evolve, each with a different rate toward individual equilibria. Also if the degree of selection changes, its clock rate should change. For a more precise clock two approaches are suggested to estimate these time dependent changes in evolutionary rate. An improved clock could improve estimation of phylogeny and put a time scale on that phylogeny.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1078/143446103764928486DOI Listing

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