| Literature DB >> 17194215 |
Hurng-Yi Wang1, Huan-Chieh Chien, Naoki Osada, Katsuyuki Hashimoto, Sumio Sugano, Takashi Gojobori, Chen-Kung Chou, Shih-Feng Tsai, Chung-I Wu, C-K James Shen.
Abstract
Brain-expressed genes are known to evolve slowly in mammals. Nevertheless, since brains of higher primates have evolved rapidly, one might expect acceleration in DNA sequence evolution in their brain-expressed genes. In this study, we carried out full-length cDNA sequencing on the brain transcriptome of an Old World monkey (OWM) and then conducted three-way comparisons among (i) mouse, OWM, and human, and (ii) OWM, chimpanzee, and human. Although brain-expressed genes indeed appear to evolve more rapidly in species with more advanced brains (apes > OWM > mouse), a similar lineage effect is observable for most other genes. The broad inclusion of genes in the reference set to represent the genomic average is therefore critical to this type of analysis. Calibrated against the genomic average, the rate of evolution among brain-expressed genes is probably lower (or at most equal) in humans than in chimpanzee and OWM. Interestingly, the trend of slow evolution in coding sequence is no less pronounced among brain-specific genes, vis-à-vis brain-expressed genes in general. The human brain may thus differ from those of our close relatives in two opposite directions: (i) faster evolution in gene expression, and (ii) a likely slowdown in the evolution of protein sequences. Possible explanations and hypotheses are discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17194215 PMCID: PMC1717015 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0050013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
The Ka and Ks Values for Genes Expressed in the Brain Versus for All Genes in the Genome
Figure 1The Ka/Ks Ratios between Human and Mouse for Genes Expressed in Brain, Liver, and/or Muscle
The number of genes is given in parentheses above each Ka/Ks value; the 95% confidence interval is given in parentheses below each Ka/Ks value. Expression data for brain and liver were from Enard et al. [5], and data fro muscle were from Public Expression Profiling Resource (http://pepr.cnmcresearch.org).
Figure 2Lineage-Specific Ka/Ks Ratios for Brain-Expressed cDNAs
The Ka and Ks values along each branch were calculated by the PAML method [18], and the Ka/Ks ratios are given.
(A) There were 1,469 brain-expressed genes common to human, OWM, and mouse.
(B) There were 1,668 brain-expressed genes common to human, chimpanzee, and OWM.
For details, see Tables 2 and 3.
Ka and Ks Values in the Human, OWM, and Mouse Lineages as Shown in Figure 2A
Ka and Ks Values in the Human, Chimpanzee, and OWM Lineages as Shown in Figure 2B
Ka and Ks Values in the Human, Chimpanzee, and OWM Lineages
Ka and Ks Values in the Human, Chimpanzee, and OWM Lineages