358 CHAPTER 14
important to bacteria and archaea, in which they are widespread in the genome,
but they are also found in viruses and a small number of eukaryotes.
Gene structure
A shocking discovery was made in 1977, in the early days of DNA sequencing.
The genes that code for many proteins are broken into pieces. These pieces—the
exons—are separated by stretches of noncoding DNA—the introns (see Chapter
4). Further research revealed that most genes in prokaryotes lack introns, while
most genes in eukaryotes have them. In humans, about one-fourth of the entire
genome is made up of introns (FIGURE 14.14).
When a gene with introns is transcribed into messenger RNA, the message
is processed by splicing to produce the final message that is then translated into
a protein. The splicing removes all the segments of the message corresponding
to introns. Splicing can also remove one or more segments that correspond to
exons. Alternative splicing brings together different combinations of exons from
the same locus. As a result, a single gene can produce more than one protein. The
current record holder is the gene Dscam in Drosophila. Alternative splicing of its
95 exons could potentially produce more than 38,000 kinds of proteins from this
single gene [69]. Alternative splicing is a major mechanism used by eukaryotes to
increase organismal complexity without increasing the size of their genomes, and
it may be as important as amino acid changes in the functional diversification of
proteins. Changes in alternative splicing can evolve quite quickly. About one-third
of alternative splicing events are different between the genes of humans and mice
[49], while differences in their coding sequences have evolved only half as fast.
Alternative splicing also contributes to phenotypic plasticity (see Chapters 6 and
15). The plant Arabidopsis splices some of its genes in different ways depending on
the environment in which it grows [68]. In sum, introns are essential to the proper
function of the eukaryotic genome. You will see shortly, however, that introns may
have originated for nonadaptive reasons.
Another surprising feature of how genes are put together is that they sometimes
overlap, so that one stretch of chromosome encodes two different proteins [30].
(Imagine a string of letters that form two different sentences depending on where
Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
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26%
Introns
12%
Miscellaneous
unique sequences 2%
Coding
sequences
(exons)
Miscellaneous 8%
heterochromatin
Duplications
Simple
sequence repeats
5%
3%
3%
8% 13%
SINEs
LINEs
Transposons
LT R
retrotransposons
DNA transposons
20%
FIGURE 14.14 The ingredients that make up the human
genome. Less than 2 percent is devoted to protein-coding
sequences. Different kinds of transposable elements (SINEs,
LINEs, LTR retrotransposons, and DNA transposons) together
make up almost half the genome, while introns make up more
than one-fourth. (After [23].)
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