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Inefficient purifying selection: the mammalian Y chromosome in the rodent genus Mus
Sandstedt, Sara A.; Tucker, Priscilla K.
2006-01
Citation:Sandstedt, Sara A.; Tucker, Priscilla K.; (2006). "Inefficient purifying selection: the mammalian Y chromosome in the rodent genus Mus ." Mammalian Genome 17 (1): 14-21. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/46987>
Abstract: Two related genes with potentially similar functions, one on the Y chromosome and one on the X chromosome, were examined to determine if they evolved differently because of their chromosomal positions. Six hundred fifty-seven base pairs of coding sequence of Jarid1d ( Smcy ) on the Y chromosome and Jarid1c ( Smcx ) on the X chromosome were sequenced in 13 rodent taxa. An analysis of replacement and silent substitutions, using a counting method designed for samples with small evolutionary distances, showed a significant difference between the two genes. The different patterns of replacement and silent substitutions within Jarid1d and Jarid1c may be a result of evolutionary mechanisms that are particularly strong on the Y chromosome because of its unique properties. These findings are similar to results of previous studies of Y chromosomal genes in these and other mammalian taxa, suggesting that genes on the mammalian Y evolve in a chromosome-specific manner.