TY - JOUR
T1 - Molecular evolution in Drosophila and the higher diptera - II. A time scale for fly evolution
AU - Beverley, Stephen M.
AU - Wilson, Allan C.
PY - 1984/11
Y1 - 1984/11
N2 - In this paper, we examine first the steadiness of the rate of evolutionary change in a larval hemolymph protein, LHP, in numerous Drosophila species. We estimated amino acid sequence divergence from immunological distances measured with the quantitative microcomplement fixation technique. Using tests not depending on knowledge of absolute times of divergence, we estimated the variance of the rate of evolutionary change to be at least 4 times as large as that for a process resembling radioactive decay. Thus, the rate of evolution of this protein is as uniform as that of vertebrate proteins. Our analysis indicates no acceleration of protein evolution in the lineages leading to Hawaiian drosophilines. Second, we give an explicit description of a procedure for calculating the absolute value of the mean rate of evolutionary change in this protein. This procedure is suggested for general use in calculating absolute rates of molecular evolution. The mean rate of evolution of LHP is about 1.2 immunological distance units per million years, which probably coreesponds to a unit evolutionary period of 4 million years; LHP thus evolves at a rate comparable to that of mammalian hemoglobins. Finally, we utilize the calibrated rate of LHP evolution to derive a time scale of evolution in the Drosophilidae and higher Diptera.
AB - In this paper, we examine first the steadiness of the rate of evolutionary change in a larval hemolymph protein, LHP, in numerous Drosophila species. We estimated amino acid sequence divergence from immunological distances measured with the quantitative microcomplement fixation technique. Using tests not depending on knowledge of absolute times of divergence, we estimated the variance of the rate of evolutionary change to be at least 4 times as large as that for a process resembling radioactive decay. Thus, the rate of evolution of this protein is as uniform as that of vertebrate proteins. Our analysis indicates no acceleration of protein evolution in the lineages leading to Hawaiian drosophilines. Second, we give an explicit description of a procedure for calculating the absolute value of the mean rate of evolutionary change in this protein. This procedure is suggested for general use in calculating absolute rates of molecular evolution. The mean rate of evolution of LHP is about 1.2 immunological distance units per million years, which probably coreesponds to a unit evolutionary period of 4 million years; LHP thus evolves at a rate comparable to that of mammalian hemoglobins. Finally, we utilize the calibrated rate of LHP evolution to derive a time scale of evolution in the Drosophilidae and higher Diptera.
KW - Biogeography
KW - Fossils
KW - Larval hemolymph protein
KW - Microcomplement fixation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0021723167&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/BF02100622
DO - 10.1007/BF02100622
M3 - Article
C2 - 6442354
AN - SCOPUS:0021723167
SN - 0022-2844
VL - 21
SP - 1
EP - 13
JO - Journal of Molecular Evolution
JF - Journal of Molecular Evolution
IS - 1
ER -