Literature DB >> 20335526

Natural selection drives the accumulation of amino acid tandem repeats in human proteins.

Loris Mularoni1, Alice Ledda, Macarena Toll-Riera, M Mar Albà.   

Abstract

Amino acid tandem repeats are found in a large number of eukaryotic proteins. They are often encoded by trinucleotide repeats and exhibit high intra- and interspecies size variability due to the high mutation rate associated with replication slippage. The extent to which natural selection is important in shaping amino acid repeat evolution is a matter of debate. On one hand, their high frequency may simply reflect their high probability of expansion by slippage, and they could essentially evolve in a neutral manner. On the other hand, there is experimental evidence that changes in repeat size can influence protein-protein interactions, transcriptional activity, or protein subcellular localization, indicating that repeats could be functionally relevant and thus shaped by selection. To gauge the relative contribution of neutral and selective forces in amino acid repeat evolution, we have performed a comparative analysis of amino acid repeat conservation in a large set of orthologous proteins from 12 vertebrate species. As a neutral model of repeat evolution we have used sequences with the same DNA triplet composition as the coding sequences--and thus expected to be subject to the same mutational forces--but located in syntenic noncoding genomic regions. The results strongly indicate that selection has played a more important role than previously suspected in amino acid tandem repeat evolution, by increasing the repeat retention rate and by modulating repeat size. The data obtained in this study have allowed us to identify a set of 92 repeats that are postulated to play important functional roles due to their strong selective signature, including five cases with direct experimental evidence.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20335526      PMCID: PMC2877571          DOI: 10.1101/gr.101261.109

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genome Res        ISSN: 1088-9051            Impact factor:   9.043


  61 in total

1.  Nucleotide compositional constraints on genomes generate alanine-, glycine-, and proline-rich structures in transcription factors.

Authors:  Y Nakachi; T Hayakawa; H Oota; K Sumiyama; L Wang; S Ueda
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  1997-10       Impact factor: 16.240

Review 2.  Gapped BLAST and PSI-BLAST: a new generation of protein database search programs.

Authors:  S F Altschul; T L Madden; A A Schäffer; J Zhang; Z Zhang; W Miller; D J Lipman
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  1997-09-01       Impact factor: 16.971

3.  Mutation of human short tandem repeats.

Authors:  J L Weber; C Wong
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  1993-08       Impact factor: 6.150

4.  Codon reiteration and the evolution of proteins.

Authors:  H Green; N Wang
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1994-05-10       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Altered growth and branching patterns in synpolydactyly caused by mutations in HOXD13.

Authors:  Y Muragaki; S Mundlos; J Upton; B R Olsen
Journal:  Science       Date:  1996-04-26       Impact factor: 47.728

6.  Class III POU genes: generation of homopolymeric amino acid repeats under GC pressure in mammals.

Authors:  K Sumiyama; K Washio-Watanabe; N Saitou; T Hayakawa; S Ueda
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  1996-09       Impact factor: 2.395

7.  Transcriptional activation modulated by homopolymeric glutamine and proline stretches.

Authors:  H P Gerber; K Seipel; O Georgiev; M Höfferer; M Hug; S Rusconi; W Schaffner
Journal:  Science       Date:  1994-02-11       Impact factor: 47.728

8.  Structural and functional consequences of glutamine tract variation in the androgen receptor.

Authors:  Grant Buchanan; Miao Yang; Albert Cheong; Jonathan M Harris; Ryan A Irvine; Paul F Lambert; Nicole L Moore; Michael Raynor; Petra J Neufing; Gerhard A Coetzee; Wayne D Tilley
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2004-06-15       Impact factor: 6.150

9.  Comparative analysis of amino acid repeats in rodents and humans.

Authors:  M Mar Albà; Roderic Guigó
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 9.043

10.  A transcriptional repressor obtained by alternative translation of a trinucleotide repeat.

Authors:  R B Lanz; S Wieland; M Hug; S Rusconi
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  1995-01-11       Impact factor: 16.971

View more
  52 in total

1.  Role of everlasting triplet expansions in protein evolution.

Authors:  Zohar Koren; Edward N Trifonov
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2010-12-16       Impact factor: 2.395

2.  Conformational behavior of polyalanine peptides with and without protecting groups of varying chain lengths: population of PP-II structure!

Authors:  Fateh S Nandel; Mohan L Garg; Mohd Shafique
Journal:  J Mol Model       Date:  2015-04-23       Impact factor: 1.810

3.  Hippocampal Pruning as a New Theory of Schizophrenia Etiopathogenesis.

Authors:  Enrico Cocchi; Antonio Drago; Alessandro Serretti
Journal:  Mol Neurobiol       Date:  2015-04-24       Impact factor: 5.590

Review 4.  The overdue promise of short tandem repeat variation for heritability.

Authors:  Maximilian O Press; Keisha D Carlson; Christine Queitsch
Journal:  Trends Genet       Date:  2014-08-30       Impact factor: 11.639

Review 5.  Precarious maintenance of simple DNA repeats in eukaryotes.

Authors:  Alexander J Neil; Jane C Kim; Sergei M Mirkin
Journal:  Bioessays       Date:  2017-07-13       Impact factor: 4.345

6.  A matter of life or death: how microsatellites emerge in and vanish from the human genome.

Authors:  Yogeshwar D Kelkar; Kristin A Eckert; Francesca Chiaromonte; Kateryna D Makova
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2011-10-12       Impact factor: 9.043

7.  Selection pressure on human STR loci and its relevance in repeat expansion disease.

Authors:  Makoto K Shimada; Ryoko Sanbonmatsu; Yumi Yamaguchi-Kabata; Chisato Yamasaki; Yoshiyuki Suzuki; Ranajit Chakraborty; Takashi Gojobori; Tadashi Imanishi
Journal:  Mol Genet Genomics       Date:  2016-06-11       Impact factor: 3.291

8.  A conserved extraordinarily long serine homopolymer in Dictyostelid amoebae.

Authors:  X Tian; J E Strassmann; D C Queller
Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)       Date:  2013-10-02       Impact factor: 3.821

9.  Sensing and signaling of oxidative stress in chloroplasts by inactivation of the SAL1 phosphoadenosine phosphatase.

Authors:  Kai Xun Chan; Peter D Mabbitt; Su Yin Phua; Jonathan W Mueller; Nazia Nisar; Tamara Gigolashvili; Elke Stroeher; Julia Grassl; Wiebke Arlt; Gonzalo M Estavillo; Colin J Jackson; Barry J Pogson
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2016-07-18       Impact factor: 11.205

10.  Genome-wide characterization of microsatellite DNA in fishes: survey and analysis of their abundance and frequency in genome-specific regions.

Authors:  Yi Lei; Yu Zhou; Megan Price; Zhaobin Song
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2021-06-07       Impact factor: 3.969

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.