The molecular evolution of sperm bindin in six species of sea urchins (Echinoida: Strongylocentrotidae).
BC H
(1998)
Molecular biology and evolution
- There is no summary for this article.
Biology
Abstract
The acrosomal protein bindin attaches sperm to eggs during sea urchin fertilization. Complementary to ongoing functional biochemical studies, I take a comparative approach to explore the molecular evolution of bindin in a group of closely related free-spawning echinoid species. Two alleles of the mature bindin gene were sequenced for each of six species in the sea urchin family Strongylocentrotidae. The nucleotide sequences diverged by at least 1% per Myr at both silent and replacement sites. Two short sections flanking the conserved block show an excess of nonsynonymous substitutions. Each is homologous to a region that had been identified as a target of selection in other sea urchin comparisons. A large proportion of the bindin-coding sequence consists of a highly variable repeat region. Bindin sequences, even including the large intron, could not resolve the branching order among five of the species.
Comments are visible to all users.
Login or Register for free to comment on this publication.
Your personal notes related to this publication. These notes are only visible to you, will save automatically, and will be here when you come back.
Login or Register for free to make personal notes.
Authors: | BC H |
Year published: | 1998 |
DOI: | |
Full-text available: | No |
Journal: | Molecular biology and evolution |
Publisher: |

Search Controls
Log in or Register for free to adjust controls.
Adjust how much the below factors influence search score
Boost the overall effect of controls on search score

Citation
Something went wrong trying to cite the current publication. Please try again later.

Share this article

Badges

Downloads
Log in or Register for free to download citations