Smith, A. B. & Peterson, K. J. Dating the time of origin of major clades: molecular clocks and the fossil record. Annu. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci.30, 65–88 (2002). A review of the controversy surrounding dates for the Cambrian explosion of animal phyla and the early Tertiary radiation of modern mammals and birds. Written by a palaeontologist and a molecular geneticist, this review takes a critical look at the reliability of both fossil and molecular dates. ArticleCAS Google Scholar
Korber, B. et al.Timing the ancestor of the HIV-1 pandemic strains. Science288, 1789–1796 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Zuckerkandl, E. & Pauling, L. in Horizons in Biochemistry (eds Kasha, M. & Pullman, B.) 189–225 (Academic Press, New York, 1962). Google Scholar
Dickerson, R. E. The structure of cytochrome c and rates of molecular evolution. J. Mol. Evol.1, 26–45 (1971). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Penny, D., McComish, B. J., Charleston, M. A. & Hendy, M. D. Mathematical elegance with biochemical realism: the covarion model of molecular evolution. J. Mol. Evol.53, 711–723 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Smith, N. H. & Eyre-Walker, A. Adaptive protein evolution in_Drosophila_. Nature415, 1022–1024 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Darwin, C. The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection 6th edn Ch. 4 64 (John Murray, London, 1872). Remarkably prescient exposition of the processes of evolution, including a pre-genetic description of the neutral theory, pre-emptively rebutting rumours that neutral evolution is 'non–Darwinian'. Google Scholar
Fleischer, R. C., McIntosh, C. E. & Tarr, C. L. Evolution on a volcanic conveyor belt: using phylogeographic reconstructions and K-Ar based ages of the Hawaiian islands to estimate molecular evolutionary rates. Mol. Ecol.7, 533–545 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Gillespie, J. H. The Causes of Molecular Evolution (Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 1991). Google Scholar
Zheng, Q. On the dispersion index of a Markovian molecular clock. Math. Biosci.172, 115–128 (2001). This gives a statistical view of the expected variability in rates that occur when the simple probabilistic models of molecular evolution are allowed to increase in complexity. ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Bickel, D. R. Implications of fluctuations in substitution rates: impact on the uncertainty of branch lengths and on relative-rate tests. J. Mol. Evol.50, 381–390 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Cutler, D. J. Estimating divergence times in the presence of an overdispersed molecular clock. Mol. Biol. Evol.17, 1647–1660 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Bastolla, U., Porto, M., Roman, H. E. & Vendruscolo, M. Lack of self-averaging in neutral evolution of proteins. Phys. Rev. Lett.89, article no. 208101 (2002). This original paper follows the evolution of protein sequences that are restricted in their predicted tertiary structure. It shows, using basic biochemical principles, that the variability in rates of a molecular clock is expected to be higher than for a simple Poisson process.
Swanson, K. W., Irwin, D. M. & Wilson, A. C. Stomach lysozyme gene of the langur monkey: tests for convergence and positive selection. J. Mol. Evol.33, 418–425 (1991). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Zhang, J. Z., Zhang, Y. P. & Rosenberg, H. F. Adaptive evolution of a duplicated pancreatic ribonuclease gene in a leaf-eating monkey. Nature Genet.30, 411–415 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Papadopoulos, D. et al. Genomic evolution during a 10,000-generation experiment with bacteria. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA96, 3807–3812 (1999). A laboratory experiment comparing rates of morphological and molecular evolution in bacterial populations. Although adaptive phenotypic evolution was fastest at the beginning, DNA substitutions accumulated steadily through the experiment, indicating that the molecular clock is decoupled from the pace of adaptive evolution. ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Bromham, L., Woolfit, M., Lee, M. S. Y. & Rambaut, A. Testing the relationship between morphological and molecular rates of change along phylogenies. Evolution56, 1921–1930 (2002). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Ohta, T. & Kimura, M. On the constancy of the evolutionary rate of cistrons. J. Mol. Evol.1, 18–25 (1971). ArticleCAS Google Scholar
Ohta, T. Very slightly deleterious mutations and the molecular clock. J. Mol. Evol.26, 1–6 (1987). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Ohta, T. Near-neutrality in evolution of genes and gene regulation. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA99, 16134–16137 (2002). The most recent exposition of the nearly-neutral model, in which the effects of weak selection depend both on the selection coefficient of the mutation and the size of the population in which the mutant occurs. ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Felsenstein, J. Evolutionary trees from DNA sequences: a maximum likelihood approach. J. Mol. Evol.17, 368–376 (1981). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Rambaut, A. & Bromham, L. Estimating divergence dates from molecular sequences. Mol. Biol. Evol.15, 442–448 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Bromham, L., Rambaut, A., Fortey, R., Cooper, A. & Penny, D. Testing the Cambrian explosion hypothesis by using a molecular dating technique. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA95, 12386–12389 (1998). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Bromham, L. D., Rambaut, A., Hendy, M. D. & Penny, D. he power of relative rates tests depends on the data. J. Mol. Evol.50, 296–301 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Drake, J., Charlesworth, B., Charlesworth, D. & Crow, J. Rates of spontaneous mutation. Genetics148, 1667–1686 (1998). Observable mutation rates, when measured per genome per generation, are remarkably similar across widely divergent organisms, indicating that natural selection might shape optimum mutation rates. CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Ota, R. & Penny, D. Estimating changes in mutational mechanisms of evolution. J. Mol. Evol. (in the press).
Hart, R. W. & Setlow, R. B. Correlation between deoxyribonucleic acid excision-repair and life-span in a number of mammal species. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA71, 2169–2173 (1974). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Li, W. -H., Ellesworth, D. L., Krushkal, J., Chang, B. H. -J. & Hewett-Emmett, D. Rates of nucleotide substitution in primates and rodents and the generation-time effect hypothesis. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol.5, 182–187 (1996). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Chao, L. & Cox, E. C. Competition between high and low mutating strains of_Escherichia coli_. Evolution37, 125–134 (1983). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Rand, D. M. Thermal habit, metabolic rate and the evolution of mitochondrial DNA. Trends Ecol. Evol.9, 125–131 (1994). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Martin, A. P. & Palumbi, S. R. Body size, metabolic rate, generation time and the molecular clock. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA90, 4087–4091 (1993). Showed a relationship between body size and the rate of molecular evolution for vertebrates using estimates of absolute substitution rates. This paper showed that the life history of a species must influence the rate of molecular evolution. ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Martin, A. P. Metabolic rate and directional nucleotide substitution in animal mitochondrial DNA. Mol. Biol. Evol.12, 1124–1131 (1995). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Bromham, L., Rambaut, A. & Harvey, P. H. Determinants of rate variation in mammalian DNA sequence evolution. J. Mol. Evol.43, 610–621 (1996). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Bromham, L. Molecular clocks in reptiles: life history influences rate of molecular evolution. Mol. Biol. Evol.19, 302–309. (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Mooers, A. Ø. & Harvey, P. H. Metabolic rate, generation time and the rate of molecular evolution in birds. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol.3, 344–350 (1994). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Bromham, L. & Cardillo, M. Testing the link between the latitudinal gradient in species richness and rates of molecular evolution. J. Evol. Biol.16, 200–207 (2003). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Held, C. No evidence for slow-down of molecular substitution rates at subzero temperatures in Antarctic serolid isopods (Crustacea, Isopoda, Serolidae). Polar Biol.24, 497–501 (2001). Article Google Scholar
Bielas, J. H. & Heddle, J. A. Proliferation is necessary for both repair and mutation in transgenic mouse cells. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA97, 11391–11396 (2000). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Johnson, K. P. & Seger, J. Elevated rates of nonsynonymous substitution in island birds. Mol. Biol. Evol.18, 874–881 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Schmitz, J. & Moritz, R. F. A. Sociality and the rate of rDNA sequence evolution in wasps (Vespidae) and honeybees Apis. J. Mol. Evol.47, 606–612 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Barraclough, T. G. & Savolainen, V. Evolutionary rates and species diversity in flowering plants. Evolution55, 677–683 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Doolittle, R. F., Feng, D. F., Tsang, S., Cho, G. & Little, E. Determining divergence times of the major kingdoms of living organisms with a protein clock. Science271, 470–477 (1996). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Bromham, L. D., Phillips, M. J. & Penny, D. Growing up with dinosaurs: molecular dates and the mammalian radiation. Trends Ecol. Evol.14, 113–118 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Bromham, L. Molecular clocks and explosive radiations. J. Mol. Evol. (in the press).
Wu, C. -I. & Li, W. -H. Evidence for higher rates of nucleotide substitutions in rodents than in man. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA82, 1741–1745 (1985). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Kumar, S. & Hedges, S. B. A molecular timescale for vertebrate evolution. Nature392, 917–920 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Nei, M. & Glazko, G. V. Estimation of divergence times for a few mammalian and several primate species. J. Hered.93, 157–164 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Takezaki, N., Rzhetsky, A. & Nei, M. Phylogenetic test of the molecular clock and linearized trees. Mol. Biol. Evol.12, 823–833 (1995). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Bromham, L. D. & Hendy, M. D. Can fast early rates reconcile molecular dates to the Cambrian explosion? Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B267, 1041–1047 (2000). ArticleCAS Google Scholar
Sanderson, M. J. A nonparametric approach to estimating divergence times in the absence of rate constancy. J. Mol. Evol.14, 1218–1231 (1997). ArticleCAS Google Scholar
Kishino, H., Thorne, J. L. & Bruno, W. J. Performance of a divergence time estimation method under a probabilistic model of rate evolution. Mol. Biol. Evol.18, 352–361 (2001). This paper outlined new Bayesian methods for estimating dates of divergence if rates of molecular evolution vary between lineages, by allowing the mutation rate to vary with time, and averages its estimates over a range of alternatives. ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Aris-Brosou, S. & Yang, Z. Effects of models of rate evolution on estimation of divergence dates with special reference to the metazoan 18S ribosomal RNA phylogeny. Syst. Biol.51, 703–714 (2002). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Rannala, B. Identifiability of parameters in MCMC Bayesian inference of phylogeny. Syst. Biol.51, 754–760 (2002). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Bromham, L. The human zoo: endogenous retroviruses in the human genome. Trends Ecol. Evol.17, 91–97 (2002). Article Google Scholar
Tristem, M. Identification and characterization of novel human endogenous retrovirus families by phylogenetic screening of the Human Genome Mapping Project database. J. Virol.74, 3715–3730 (2000). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Shankarappa, R. et al. Consistent viral evolutionary changes associated with the progression of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection. J. Virol.73, 10489–10502 (1999). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Twiddy, S. S., Holmes, E. C. & Rambaut, A. Inferring the rate and time-scale of dengue virus evolution. Mol. Biol. Evol.20, 122–129 (2003). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Drummond, A., Pybus, O. G. & Rambaut, A. Inference of viral evolutionary rates from molecular sequences. Adv. Parasitol. (in the press). A review of the methods used to estimate substitution rates in viruses, including estimating molecular dates when rates vary.
Fitch, W. M., Leiter, J. M., Li, X. Q. & Palese, P. Positive Darwinian evolution in human influenza A viruses. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA88, 4270–4274 (1991). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Rambaut, A. Estimating the rate of molecular evolution: incorporating non-contemporaneous sequences into maximum likelihood phylogenies. Bioinformatics16, 395–399 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Page, R. D. M. & Holmes, E. C. Molecular Evolution: a Phylogenetic Approach (Blackwell Science, Oxford, UK, 1998). Google Scholar
Madsen, O. et al.Parallel adaptive radiations in two major clades of placental mammals. Nature409, 610–614 (2001). Used the quartet method which uses several calibration dates to allow for differences in substitution rate between lineages to support the hypothesis that modern mammals arose long before the final extinction of the dinosaurs. ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Conway Morris, S. Early metazoan evolution: reconciling paleontology and molecular biology. Am. Zool.38, 867–877 (1998). Article Google Scholar
Valentine, J., Jablonski, D. & Erwin, D. Fossils, molecules and embryos: new perspectives on the Cambrian explosion. Development126, 851–859 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar