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Evolution


Title:EVOLUTION OF beta-GLUCURONIDASE REGULATION IN THE GENUS MUS
Author(s):Bush RM; Paigen K;
Address:"Department of Genetics, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA"
Journal Title:Evolution
Year:1992
Volume:46
Issue:1
Page Number:1 - 15
DOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1992.tb01980.x
ISSN/ISBN:1558-5646 (Electronic) 0014-3820 (Linking)
Abstract:"Despite the central role suggested for regulatory mutations in many evolutionary scenarios, there is relatively little information available about the type and extent of regulatory differences between species, or to what extent differences between species are independent of variation within species. To address this issue we have studied the regulatory system of beta-glucuronidase, a gene implicated in a murine androgen-inducible pheromone-signalling system. We examined the changes in beta-glucuronidase hormonal regulation which have occurred during the radiation of a group of 12 closely related species of mice by assaying beta-glucuronidase activity in six different tissues after treatment with estrogen, and with androgen alone and in combination with either estrogen or growth hormone. We also examined in some detail the extent of variation in regulatory responses within species. We found extensive variation in regulatory phenotypes both within and among the species surveyed, suggesting that many of the species examined are currently polymorphic for various regulatory factors that affect inducibility of beta-glucuronidase. The variation we observed reflects changes in the ability of the beta-glucuronidase gene to respond to hormonal influences, rather than changes in aspects of the hormonal signalling system exterior to the gene. The marked differences among species in the renal and uterine responses to hormonal induction of beta-glucuronidase are not easily related to the phylogeny of the genus Mus. If hormonal induction of the gene for beta-glucuronidase is subject to natural selection, it appears to be subject to widely fluctuating selective forces. We review evidence that the apparently disorderly evolution of the hormonal responsiveness of beta-glucuronidase does not appear to be a unique property of this regulatory system. In contrast to the evolution of many protein sequences, which are tightly correlated with phylogeny and proceed at a relatively constant rate, some, perhaps many, regulatory phenotypes are in rapid evolutionary flux, providing an extensive range of phenotypes upon which selection can act"
Keywords:Androgen Mus evolution gene regulation pheromones renal induction beta-glucuronidase;
Notes:"PubMed-not-MEDLINEBush, Robin M Paigen, Kenneth eng 1992/02/01 Evolution. 1992 Feb; 46(1):1-15. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1992.tb01980.x"

 
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