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      Cytochrome b pseudogene originated from a highly divergent mitochondrial lineage in genus Rupicapra.

      Journal of Heredity
      Animals, Base Sequence, Cytochromes b, genetics, DNA Primers, DNA, Mitochondrial, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Pseudogenes, Rupicapra, classification, Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid

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          Abstract

          We have identified a nuclear pseudogene (numt) of cytochrome b (cytb) in chamois. The comparison of a fragment of 402 nucleotides of cytb and the pseudogene between the 2 species Rupicapra rupicapra and Rupicapra pyrenaica allowed direct measurement of relative rates and patterns of evolution. Mitochondrial genes evolved 7 to 12 times faster than their nuclear counterparts. Substitutions in the nucleus include a frameshift and a stop codon. Phylogenetic analysis of nuclear and mitochondrial lineages on Rupicapra and related species showed that the nuclear branch evolved as a functional mitochondrial gene until the split of the 2 species of chamois and as a typical pseudogene later on. We propose that the pseudogene originated from a highly divergent mitochondrial lineage that did not persist in the mitochondrion and transposed to the nucleus in a time close to speciation. The concurrence of highly differentiated lineages at speciation points to hybridization between highly divergent populations.

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