Literature DB >> 16368777

Alternatively and constitutively spliced exons are subject to different evolutionary forces.

Feng-Chi Chen1, Sheng-Shun Wang, Chuang-Jong Chen, Wen-Hsiung Li, Trees-Juen Chuang.   

Abstract

There has been a controversy on whether alternatively spliced exons (ASEs) evolve faster than constitutively spliced exons (CSEs). Although it has been noted that ASEs are subject to weaker selective constraints than CSEs, so they evolve faster, there have also been studies that indicated slower evolution in ASEs than in CSEs. In this study, we retrieve more than 5,000 human-mouse orthologous exons and calculate the synonymous (KS) and nonsynonymous (KA) substitution rates in these exons. Our results show that ASEs have higher KA values and higher KA/KS ratios than CSEs, indicating faster amino acid-level evolution in ASEs. The faster evolution may be in part due to weaker selective constraints. It is also possible that the faster rate is in part due to faster functional evolution in ASEs. On the other hand, the majority of ASEs have lower KS values than CSEs. With reference to the substitution rate in introns, we show that the KS values in ASEs are close to the neutral substitution rate, whereas the synonymous substitution rate in CSEs has likely been accelerated. The elevated synonymous rate in CSEs is not related to CpG dinucleotides or low-complexity regions of protein but may be weakly related to codon usage bias. The overall trends of higher KA and lower KS in ASEs than in CSEs are also observed in human-rat and mouse-rat comparisons. Therefore, our observations hold for mammals of different molecular clocks.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16368777     DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msj081

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


  35 in total

1.  Changes in exon-intron structure during vertebrate evolution affect the splicing pattern of exons.

Authors:  Sahar Gelfman; David Burstein; Osnat Penn; Anna Savchenko; Maayan Amit; Schraga Schwartz; Tal Pupko; Gil Ast
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2011-10-05       Impact factor: 9.043

2.  Constitutive splicing and economies of scale in gene expression.

Authors:  Fangyuan Ding; Michael B Elowitz
Journal:  Nat Struct Mol Biol       Date:  2019-05-27       Impact factor: 15.369

3.  Plant Gene and Alternatively Spliced Variant Annotator. A plant genome annotation pipeline for rice gene and alternatively spliced variant identification with cross-species expressed sequence tag conservation from seven plant species.

Authors:  Feng-Chi Chen; Sheng-Shun Wang; Shu-Miaw Chaw; Yao-Ting Huang; Trees-Juen Chuang
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2007-01-12       Impact factor: 8.340

4.  Positive selection acting on splicing motifs reflects compensatory evolution.

Authors:  Shengdong Ke; Xiang H-F Zhang; Lawrence A Chasin
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2008-01-18       Impact factor: 9.043

5.  Genome-wide evidence for selection acting on single amino acid repeats.

Authors:  Wilfried Haerty; G Brian Golding
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2010-01-07       Impact factor: 9.043

6.  Evolutionarily Conserved Alternative Splicing Across Monocots.

Authors:  Wenbin Mei; Lucas Boatwright; Guanqiao Feng; James C Schnable; W Brad Barbazuk
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2017-08-24       Impact factor: 4.562

7.  Large introns in relation to alternative splicing and gene evolution: a case study of Drosophila bruno-3.

Authors:  Nikolai P Kandul; Mohamed A F Noor
Journal:  BMC Genet       Date:  2009-10-19       Impact factor: 2.797

8.  Evolution of alternative and constitutive regions of mammalian 5'UTRs.

Authors:  Alissa M Resch; Aleksey Y Ogurtsov; Igor B Rogozin; Svetlana A Shabalina; Eugene V Koonin
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2009-04-16       Impact factor: 3.969

9.  Predicting functional alternative splicing by measuring RNA selection pressure from multigenome alignments.

Authors:  Hongchao Lu; Lan Lin; Seiko Sato; Yi Xing; Christopher J Lee
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2009-12-18       Impact factor: 4.475

10.  Rodent-specific alternative exons are more frequent in rapidly evolving genes and in paralogs.

Authors:  Ramil N Nurtdinov; Andrey A Mironov; Mikhail S Gelfand
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2009-06-26       Impact factor: 3.260

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