Sibly Richard M, Meade Andrew, Boxall Nicola, Wilkinson Michael J, Corne Dave W, Whittaker John C
School of Animal and Microbial Sciences, Department of Applied Statistics, University of Reading, United Kingdom.
Mol Biol Evol. 2003 Mar;20(3):453-9. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msg056.
Microsatellite lengths change over evolutionary time through a process of replication slippage. A recently proposed model of this process holds that the expansionary tendencies of slippage mutation are balanced by point mutations breaking longer microsatellites into smaller units and that this process gives rise to the observed frequency distributions of uninterrupted microsatellite lengths. We refer to this as the slippage/point-mutation theory. Here we derive the theory's predictions for interrupted microsatellites comprising regions of perfect repeats, labeled segments, separated by dinucleotide interruptions containing point mutations. These predictions are tested by reference to the frequency distributions of segments of AC microsatellite in the human genome, and several predictions are shown not to be supported by the data, as follows. The estimated slippage rates are relatively low for the first four repeats, and then rise initially linearly with length, in accordance with previous work. However, contrary to expectation and the experimental evidence, the inferred slippage rates decline in segments above 10 repeats. Point mutation rates are also found to be higher within microsatellites than elsewhere. The theory provides an excellent fit to the frequency distribution of peripheral segment lengths but fails to explain why internal segments are shorter. Furthermore, there are fewer microsatellites with many segments than predicted. The frequencies of interrupted microsatellites decline geometrically with microsatellite size measured in number of segments, so that for each additional segment, the number of microsatellites is 33.6% less. Overall we conclude that the detailed structure of interrupted microsatellites cannot be reconciled with the existing slippage/point-mutation theory of microsatellite evolution, and we suggest that microsatellites are stabilized by processes acting on interior rather than on peripheral segments.
微卫星长度在进化过程中通过复制滑动过程发生变化。最近提出的关于这一过程的模型认为,滑动突变的扩张趋势被点突变所平衡,点突变将较长的微卫星分解为较小的单元,并且这一过程导致了观察到的不间断微卫星长度的频率分布。我们将此称为滑动/点突变理论。在这里,我们推导该理论对于包含完美重复区域、标记片段且被含有点突变的二核苷酸间隔分隔的中断微卫星的预测。通过参考人类基因组中AC微卫星片段的频率分布来检验这些预测,结果表明有几个预测不被数据支持,如下所述。如先前研究一样,前四个重复的估计滑动率相对较低,然后最初随长度呈线性上升。然而,与预期和实验证据相反,在超过10个重复的片段中推断的滑动率下降。还发现微卫星内的点突变率高于其他地方。该理论与周边片段长度的频率分布拟合得很好,但无法解释为什么内部片段较短。此外,具有多个片段的微卫星比预测的要少。中断微卫星的频率随着以片段数量衡量的微卫星大小呈几何级数下降,因此对于每增加一个片段,微卫星的数量减少33.6%。总体而言,我们得出结论,中断微卫星的详细结构与现有的微卫星进化滑动/点突变理论不一致,并且我们认为微卫星是通过作用于内部而非周边片段的过程来稳定的。