Molecular origins of rapid and continuous morphological evolution

JW Fondon III, HR Garner - Proceedings of the National …, 2004 - National Acad Sciences
JW Fondon III, HR Garner
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2004National Acad Sciences
Mutations in cis-regulatory sequences have been implicated as being the predominant
source of variation in morphological evolution. We offer a hypothesis that gene-associated
tandem repeat expansions and contractions are a major source of phenotypic variation in
evolution. Here, we describe a comparative genomic study of repetitive elements in
developmental genes of 92 breeds of dogs. We find evidence for selection for divergence at
coding repeat loci in the form of both elevated purity and extensive length polymorphism …
Mutations in cis-regulatory sequences have been implicated as being the predominant source of variation in morphological evolution. We offer a hypothesis that gene-associated tandem repeat expansions and contractions are a major source of phenotypic variation in evolution. Here, we describe a comparative genomic study of repetitive elements in developmental genes of 92 breeds of dogs. We find evidence for selection for divergence at coding repeat loci in the form of both elevated purity and extensive length polymorphism among different breeds. Variations in the number of repeats in the coding regions of the Alx-4 (aristaless-like 4) and Runx-2 (runt-related transcription factor 2) genes were quantitatively associated with significant differences in limb and skull morphology. We identified similar repeat length variation in the coding repeats of Runx-2, Twist, and Dlx-2 in several other species. The high frequency and incremental effects of repeat length mutations provide molecular explanations for swift, yet topologically conservative morphological evolution.
National Acad Sciences