The Evolutionary Landscape of Alternative Splicing in Vertebrate Species
University of Lisbon · University of Toronto · +3 more institutions
Abstract
How species with similar repertoires of protein-coding genes differ so markedly at the phenotypic level is poorly understood. By comparing organ transcriptomes from vertebrate species spanning ~350 million years of evolution, we observed significant differences in alternative splicing complexity between vertebrate lineages, with the highest complexity in primates. Within 6 million years, the splicing profiles of physiologically equivalent organs diverged such that they are more strongly related to the identity of a species than they are to organ type. Most vertebrate species-specific splicing patterns are cis-directed. However, a subset of pronounced splicing changes are predicted to remodel protein…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.56
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 77
Authors
17Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Alternative splicing
- RNA splicing
- Exon
- Intron
- Evolutionary biology
- Vertebrate
- Genetics
- Life in Land