Chojnowski, J.L.,
J. Franklin, Y. Katsu, T. Iguchi,L.J. Guillette Jr, R.T. Kimball and E.L. Braun. 2007. Patterns
of Vertebrate
Isochore Evolution Revealed by Comparison of Expressed Mammalian, Avian
and Crocodilian
Genes. Journal of Molecular Evolution 65: 259-266.
Vertebrate
genomes are mosaics of isochores, defined as long (>100 kb)
regions with relatively homogeneous within-region base composition.
Birds and mammals have more GC-rich isochores than amphibians and fish,
and the GC-rich isochores of birds and mammals have been suggested to
be an adaptation to homeothermy. If this hypothesis is correct, all
poikilothermic (cold-blooded) vertebrates, including the nonavian
reptiles, are expected to lack a GC-rich isochore structure. Previous
studies using various methods to examine isochore structure in
crocodilians, turtles, and squamates have led to different conclusions.
We collected more than 6000 expressed sequence tags (ESTs) from the
American alligator to overcome sample size limitations suggested to be
the fundamental problem in the previous reptilian studies. The
alligator ESTs were assembled and aligned with their human, mouse, chicken,
and western clawed frog orthologs, resulting in 366 alignments.
Analyses of third-codon-position GC content provided conclusive
evidence that the poikilothermic alligator has GC-rich isochores, like
homeothermic birds and mammals. We placed these results in a
theoretical framework able to unify available models of isochore
evolution. The data collected for this study allowed us to reject the
models that explain the evolution of GC content using changes in body
temperature associated with the transition from poikilothermy to
homeothermy. Falsification of these models places fundamental
constraints upon the plausible pathways for the evolution of isochores.