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Faster evolutionary rates in endosymbiotic bacteria than in cospeciating insect hosts
Authors:Nancy A Moran  Carol D von Dohlen  Paul Baumann
Institution:(1) Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, 85721 Tucson, AZ, USA;(2) Microbiology Section, University of California-Davis, 95616 Davis, CA, USA
Abstract:The hypothesis of a universal molecular clock holds that divergent lineages exhibit approximately constant rates of nucleotide substitution over evolutionary time for a particular macromolecule. We compare divergences of ribosomal DNA for aphids (Insecta) and Buchnera, the maternally transmitted, endosymbiotic bacteria that have cospeciated with aphids since initially infecting them over 100 million years ago. Substitution rates average 36 times greater for Buchnera than for their aphid hosts for regions of small-subunit rDNA that are homologous for prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Aphids exhibit 18S rDNA substitution rates that are within the range observed in related insects. In contrast, 16S rDNA evolves about twice as fast in Buchnera as in related free-living bacterial lineages. Nonetheless, the difference between Buchnera and aphids is much greater, suggesting that rates may be generally higher in bacteria. This finding adds to evidence that molecular clocks are only locally rather than universally valid among taxonomic groups. It is consistent with the hypothesis that rates of sequence evolution depend on generation time.
Keywords:Aphid  Bacteria  Buchnera  Cospeciation  Endosymbiosis  Evolutionary rates  Molecular clock  Prokaryote  Ribosomal DNA
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