Abstract

A comparison of the nucleotide sequences around the splice junctions that flank old (shared by two or more major lineages of eukaryotes) and new (lineage-specific) introns in eukaryotic genes reveals substantial differences in the distribution of information between introns and exons. Old introns have a lower information content in the exon regions adjacent to the splice sites than new introns but have a corresponding higher information content in the intron itself. This suggests that introns insert into nonrandom (proto-splice) sites but, during the evolution of an intron after insertion, the splice signal shifts from the flanking exon regions to the ends of the intron itself. Accumulation of information inside the intron during evolution suggests that new introns largely emerge de novo rather than through propagation and migration of old introns.

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