Comparative genome sequencing of <i>Drosophila pseudoobscura</i> : Chromosomal, gene, and <i>cis</i> -element evolution

Stephen Richards(Baylor College of Medicine), Yue Liu(Baylor College of Medicine), Brian R. Bettencourt(Harvard University), Pavel Hradecky(Harvard University), Stan Letovsky(Harvard University), Rasmus Nielsen(Cornell University), Kevin Thornton(Cornell University), Melissa J. Hubisz(Cornell University), Rui Chen(Baylor College of Medicine), Richard P. Meisel(Pennsylvania State University), Olivier Couronne(United States Department of Energy), Sujun Hua(Yale University), Mark A. Smith(Harvard University), Peili Zhang(Harvard University), Jing Liu(Baylor College of Medicine), Harmen J. Bussemaker(Columbia University), Marinus F. van Batenburg(Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience), Sally Howells(Baylor College of Medicine), Steven E. Scherer(Baylor College of Medicine), Erica Sodergren(Baylor College of Medicine), Beverly B. Matthews(Harvard University), Madeline A. Crosby(Harvard University), Andrew J. Schroeder(Harvard University), Daniel Ortíz-Barrientos(Louisiana State University), Catharine M. Rives(Baylor College of Medicine), Michael L. Metzker(Baylor College of Medicine), Donna M. Muzny(Baylor College of Medicine), Graham Scott(Baylor College of Medicine), David L. Steffen(Baylor College of Medicine), David A. Wheeler(Baylor College of Medicine), Kim C. Worley(Baylor College of Medicine), Paul Havlak(Baylor College of Medicine), K. James Durbin(Baylor College of Medicine), Amy Egan(Baylor College of Medicine), Rachel Gill(Baylor College of Medicine), Jennifer Hume(Baylor College of Medicine), Margaret Morgan(Baylor College of Medicine), George Miner(Baylor College of Medicine), Cerissa Hamilton(Baylor College of Medicine), Yanmei Huang(Harvard University), Lenée Waldron(Baylor College of Medicine), Daniel Verduzco(Baylor College of Medicine), Kerstin P. Clerc-Blankenburg(Baylor College of Medicine), Inna Dubchak(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Mohamed A. F. Noor(Louisiana State University), Wyatt W. Anderson(University of Georgia), Kevin P. White(Yale University), Andrew G. Clark(Cornell University), Stephen W. Schaeffer(Pennsylvania State University), William M Gelbart(Harvard University), George M. Weinstock(Baylor College of Medicine), Richard A. Gibbs(Baylor College of Medicine)
Genome Research
January 1, 2005
Cited by 508Open Access
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Abstract

We have sequenced the genome of a second Drosophila species, Drosophila pseudoobscura, and compared this to the genome sequence of Drosophila melanogaster, a primary model organism. Throughout evolution the vast majority of Drosophila genes have remained on the same chromosome arm, but within each arm gene order has been extensively reshuffled, leading to a minimum of 921 syntenic blocks shared between the species. A repetitive sequence is found in the D. pseudoobscura genome at many junctions between adjacent syntenic blocks. Analysis of this novel repetitive element family suggests that recombination between offset elements may have given rise to many paracentric inversions, thereby contributing to the shuffling of gene order in the D. pseudoobscura lineage. Based on sequence similarity and synteny, 10,516 putative orthologs have been identified as a core gene set conserved over 25-55 million years (Myr) since the pseudoobscura/melanogaster divergence. Genes expressed in the testes had higher amino acid sequence divergence than the genome-wide average, consistent with the rapid evolution of sex-specific proteins. Cis-regulatory sequences are more conserved than random and nearby sequences between the species--but the difference is slight, suggesting that the evolution of cis-regulatory elements is flexible. Overall, a pattern of repeat-mediated chromosomal rearrangement, and high coadaptation of both male genes and cis-regulatory sequences emerges as important themes of genome divergence between these species of Drosophila.


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