Molecular Biology and Evolution, Vol. 25, pp. 352-361
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Duplication and accelerated evolution of growth hormone gene
in passerine birds.1
Tamaki
Yuri*, Rebecca T. Kimball, Edward L. Braun and Michael J. Braun
Department of Vertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural
History, Smithsonian Institution, 4210 Silver Hill Road, Suitland, MD
(T.Y., M.J.B.); Department of Zoology, University of Florida (T.Y.,
R.T.K., E.L.B.); Behavior, Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics Program,
University of Maryland (M.J.B.)
We report the discovery of a duplication of the
growth hormone (GH) gene in a major group of birds, the passerines
(Aves: Passeriformes). Phylogenetic analysis of 1.3-kb partial DNA
sequences of GH genes for 24 species of passerines and numerous
outgroups indicates that the duplication occurred in the ancestral
lineage of extant passerines. Both duplicates and their open-reading
frames are preserved throughout the passerine clade, and both
duplicates are expressed in the zebra finch brain, suggesting that both
are likely to be functional. The estimated rates of amino acid
evolution are more than 10-fold higher in passerine GH genes than in
those of their closest nonpasserine relatives. In addition, although
the 84 codons sequenced are generally highly conserved for both
passerines and nonpasserines, comparisons of the
nonsynonymous/synonymous substitution ratios and the rate of predicted
amino acid changes indicate that the 2 gene duplicates are evolving
under different selective pressures and may be functionally divergent.
The evidence of differential selection, coupled with the preservation
of both gene copies in all major lineages since the origin of
passerines, suggests that the duplication may be of adaptive
significance, with possible implications for the explosive
diversification of the passerine clade.
This work was supported by the National Science Foundation
"Assembling the Tree of Life" program (DEB-0228617, DEB-0228675,
DEB-0228682, and DEB-0228688).
1 The title of this paper was
incorrectly printed as "Duplication of accelerated evolution and growth
hormone gene in passerine birds" and corrected in an erratum.
* Corresponding author