9 research outputs found
In search of lost introns
Many fundamental questions concerning the emergence and subsequent evolution
of eukaryotic exon-intron organization are still unsettled. Genome-scale
comparative studies, which can shed light on crucial aspects of eukaryotic
evolution, require adequate computational tools.
We describe novel computational methods for studying spliceosomal intron
evolution. Our goal is to give a reliable characterization of the dynamics of
intron evolution. Our algorithmic innovations address the identification of
orthologous introns, and the likelihood-based analysis of intron data. We
discuss a compression method for the evaluation of the likelihood function,
which is noteworthy for phylogenetic likelihood problems in general. We prove
that after preprocessing time, subsequent evaluations take time almost surely in the Yule-Harding random model of -taxon
phylogenies, where is the input sequence length.
We illustrate the practicality of our methods by compiling and analyzing a
data set involving 18 eukaryotes, more than in any other study to date. The
study yields the surprising result that ancestral eukaryotes were fairly
intron-rich. For example, the bilaterian ancestor is estimated to have had more
than 90% as many introns as vertebrates do now