Events in the Evolution of Pre-Proinsulin
- 20 August 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 217 (4561) , 729-732
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.7100918
Abstract
An extensive computer-assisted analysis of known pre-proinsulin coding sequences has shown correlations that can be interpreted as evidence for an intron-mediated juxtaposition of exons in the evolution of these genes. The evidence includes the discovery that the regions of the pre-proinsulin genes that code for the signal peptide consist of nearly tandem repeating units of nine base pairs. This pattern reappears in the C region of the genes after a large intron that occurs in three of the four genes analyzed. A model is proposed in which primordial insulin was coded for by two separate minigenes arising from a gene duplication, each with identical or nearly identical signal peptide coding regions. The minigenes fused into one transcriptional unit mediated by the large intron, and the signal peptide coding region of one of the putative minigenes evolved into the latter portion of the C peptide coding region.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- The theory and computation of evolutionary distances: Pattern recognitionJournal of Algorithms, 1980
- The evolution of genes: the chicken preproinsulin geneCell, 1980
- Sequence of the human insulin geneNature, 1980
- The structure and evolution of the two nonallelic rat preproinsulin genesCell, 1979