Literature DB >> 11264407

Differential selection after duplication in mammalian developmental genes.

E T Dermitzakis1, A G Clark.   

Abstract

Gene duplication provides the opportunity for subsequent refinement of distinct functions of the duplicated copies. Either through changes in coding sequence or changes in regulatory regions, duplicate copies appear to obtain new or tissue-specific functions. If this divergence were driven by natural selection, we would expect duplicated copies to have differentiated patterns of substitutions. We tested this hypothesis using genes that duplicated before the human/mouse split and whose orthologous relations were clear. The null hypothesis is that the number of amino acid changes between humans and mice was distributed similarly across different paralogs. We used a method modified from Tang and Lewontin to detect heterogeneity in the amino acid substitution pattern between those different paralogs. Our results show that many of the paralogous gene pairs appear to be under differential selection in the human/mouse comparison. The properties that led to diversification appear to have arisen before the split of the human and mouse lineages. Further study of the diverged genes revealed insights regarding the patterns of amino acid substitution that resulted in differences in function and/or expression of these genes. This approach has utility in the study of newly identified members of gene families in genomewide data mining and for contrasting the merits of alternative hypotheses for the evolutionary divergence of function of duplicated genes.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11264407     DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a003835

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Evol        ISSN: 0737-4038            Impact factor:   16.240


  31 in total

1.  The probability of preservation of a newly arisen gene duplicate.

Authors:  M Lynch; M O'Hely; B Walsh; A Force
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2001-12       Impact factor: 4.562

2.  A likelihood ratio test for evolutionary rate shifts and functional divergence among proteins.

Authors:  B Knudsen; M M Miyamoto
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2001-12-04       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  The early stages of duplicate gene evolution.

Authors:  Richard C Moore; Michael D Purugganan
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2003-12-11       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Asymmetric sequence divergence of duplicate genes.

Authors:  Gavin C Conant; Andreas Wagner
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2003-09       Impact factor: 9.043

5.  Gene conversion and functional divergence in the beta-globin gene family.

Authors:  Gabriela Aguileta; Joseph P Bielawski; Ziheng Yang
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2004-08       Impact factor: 2.395

6.  Relaxed selection among duplicate floral regulatory genes in Lamiales.

Authors:  Jan E Aagaard; John H Willis; Patrick C Phillips
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2006-10-04       Impact factor: 2.395

7.  A burst of protein sequence evolution and a prolonged period of asymmetric evolution follow gene duplication in yeast.

Authors:  Devin R Scannell; Kenneth H Wolfe
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2007-11-19       Impact factor: 9.043

8.  The distribution of fitness effects of new deleterious amino acid mutations in humans.

Authors:  Adam Eyre-Walker; Megan Woolfit; Ted Phelps
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2006-03-17       Impact factor: 4.562

9.  Functional divergence outlines the evolution of novel protein function in NifH/BchL protein family.

Authors:  Subarna Thakur; Asim K Bothra; Arnab Sen
Journal:  J Biosci       Date:  2013-11       Impact factor: 1.826

Review 10.  The evolution of gene duplications: classifying and distinguishing between models.

Authors:  Hideki Innan; Fyodor Kondrashov
Journal:  Nat Rev Genet       Date:  2010-01-06       Impact factor: 53.242

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