Evidence of independent gene duplications during the evolution of archaeal and eukaryotic family B DNA polymerases

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Abstract

Eukaryotes and archaea both possess multiple genes coding for family B DNA polymerases. In animals and fungi, three family B DNA polymerases, α, δ, and ε, are responsible for replication of nuclear DNA. We used a PCR- based approach to amplify and sequence phylogenetically conserved regions of these three DNA polymerases from Giardia intestinalis and Trichomonas vaginalis, representatives of early-diverging eukaryotic lineages. Phylogenetic analysis of eukaryotic and archaeal paralogs suggests that the gene duplications that gave rise to the three replicative paralogs occurred before the divergence of the earliest eukaryotic lineages, and that all eukaryotes are likely to possess these paralogs. One eukaryotic paralog, ε, consistently branches within archaeal sequences to the exclusion of other eukaryotic paralogs, suggesting that an ε-like family B DNA polymerase was ancestral to both archaea and eukaryotes. Because crenarchaeote and euryarchaeote paralogs do not form monophyletic groups in phylogenetic analysis, it is possible that archaeal family B paralogs themselves evolved by a series of gene duplications independent of the gene duplications that gave rise to eukaryotic paralogs.

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Edgell, D. R., Malik, S. B., & Doolittle, W. F. (1998). Evidence of independent gene duplications during the evolution of archaeal and eukaryotic family B DNA polymerases. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 15(9), 1207–1217. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a026028

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