What tangled web: barriers to rampant horizontal gene transfer
- 13 June 2005
- Vol. 27 (7) , 741-747
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bies.20258
Abstract
Dawkins in his The Selfish Gene(1) quite aptly applies the term “selfish” to parasitic repetitive DNA sequences endemic to eukaryotic genomes, especially vertebrates. Doolittle and Sapienza(2) as well as Orgel and Crick(3) enlivened this notion of selfish DNA with the identification of such repetitive sequences as remnants of mobile elements such as transposons. In addition, Orgel and Crick(3) associated parasitic DNA with a potential to outgrow their host genomes by propagating both vertically via conventional genome replication as well as infectiously by horizontal gene transfer (HGT) to other genomes. Still later, Doolittle(4) speculated that unchecked HGT between unrelated genomes so complicates phylogeny that the conventional representation of a tree of life would have to be replaced by a thicket or a web of life.(4) In contrast, considerable data now show that reconstructions based on whole genome sequences are consistent with the conventional “tree of life”.(5–10) Here, we identify natural barriers that protect modern genome populations from the inroads of rampant HGT. BioEssays 27:741–747, 2005.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Genome Size Evolution in Pufferfish: A Comparative Analysis of Diodontid and Tetraodontid Pufferfish GenomesGenome Research, 2003
- Effects of Environment on Compensatory Mutations to Ameliorate Costs of Antibiotic ResistanceScience, 2000
- Evidence for DNA Loss as a Determinant of Genome SizeScience, 2000
- The evolutionary dynamics of repetitive DNA in eukaryotesNature, 1994
- Characterization of the pufferfish (Fugu) genome as a compact model vertebrate genomeNature, 1993
- TRANSPOSABLE ELEMENTS IN DROSOPHILA AND OTHER DIPTERAAnnual Review of Genetics, 1980
- Selfish DNA: the ultimate parasiteNature, 1980
- Selfish genes, the phenotype paradigm and genome evolutionNature, 1980
- The genetical evolution of social behaviour. IIJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1964
- The genetical evolution of social behaviour. IJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1964