While studies of the evolutionary histories of protein families are commonplace, little is known on noncoding RNAs beyond
microRNAs and some snoRNAs. Here we investigate in detail the evolutionary history of the nine spliceosomal snRNA families
(U1, U2, U4, U5, U6, U11, U12, U4atac, and U6atac) across the completely or partially sequenced genomes of metazoan animals.
Representatives of the five major spliceosomal snRNAs were found in all genomes. None of the minor splicesomal snRNAs were
detected in nematodes or in the shotgun traces of
Oikopleura dioica, while in all other animal genomes at most one of them is missing. Although snRNAs are present in multiple copies in most
genomes, distinguishable paralogue groups are not stable over long evolutionary times, although they appear independently
in several clades. In general, animal snRNA secondary structures are highly conserved, albeit, in particular, U11 and U12
in insects exhibit dramatic variations. An analysis of genomic context of snRNAs reveals that they behave like mobile elements,
exhibiting very little syntenic conservation.
Keywords snRNA - Homology search - Secondary structure - Pseudogenes - Promoter - Syntenic conservation - Phylogenetics - Paralogues