Gene duplicability-connectivity-complexity across organisms and a neutral evolutionary explanation.

Gene duplication has long been acknowledged by biologists as a major evolutionary force shaping genomic architectures and characteristics across the Tree of Life. Major research has been conducting on elucidating the fate of duplicated genes in a variety of organisms, as well as factors that affect...

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Main Authors: Yun Zhu, Peng Du, Luay Nakhleh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3439388?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-9662e6cc63834d8d9f29807f486ff6f62020-11-25T02:51:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0179e4449110.1371/journal.pone.0044491Gene duplicability-connectivity-complexity across organisms and a neutral evolutionary explanation.Yun ZhuPeng DuLuay NakhlehGene duplication has long been acknowledged by biologists as a major evolutionary force shaping genomic architectures and characteristics across the Tree of Life. Major research has been conducting on elucidating the fate of duplicated genes in a variety of organisms, as well as factors that affect a gene's duplicability--that is, the tendency of certain genes to retain more duplicates than others. In particular, two studies have looked at the correlation between gene duplicability and its degree in a protein-protein interaction network in yeast, mouse, and human, and another has looked at the correlation between gene duplicability and its complexity (length, number of domains, etc.) in yeast. In this paper, we extend these studies to six species, and two trends emerge. There is an increase in the duplicability-connectivity correlation that agrees with the increase in the genome size as well as the phylogenetic relationship of the species. Further, the duplicability-complexity correlation seems to be constant across the species. We argue that the observed correlations can be explained by neutral evolutionary forces acting on the genomic regions containing the genes. For the duplicability-connectivity correlation, we show through simulations that an increasing trend can be obtained by adjusting parameters to approximate genomic characteristics of the respective species. Our results call for more research into factors, adaptive and non-adaptive alike, that determine a gene's duplicability.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3439388?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yun Zhu
Peng Du
Luay Nakhleh
spellingShingle Yun Zhu
Peng Du
Luay Nakhleh
Gene duplicability-connectivity-complexity across organisms and a neutral evolutionary explanation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Yun Zhu
Peng Du
Luay Nakhleh
author_sort Yun Zhu
title Gene duplicability-connectivity-complexity across organisms and a neutral evolutionary explanation.
title_short Gene duplicability-connectivity-complexity across organisms and a neutral evolutionary explanation.
title_full Gene duplicability-connectivity-complexity across organisms and a neutral evolutionary explanation.
title_fullStr Gene duplicability-connectivity-complexity across organisms and a neutral evolutionary explanation.
title_full_unstemmed Gene duplicability-connectivity-complexity across organisms and a neutral evolutionary explanation.
title_sort gene duplicability-connectivity-complexity across organisms and a neutral evolutionary explanation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Gene duplication has long been acknowledged by biologists as a major evolutionary force shaping genomic architectures and characteristics across the Tree of Life. Major research has been conducting on elucidating the fate of duplicated genes in a variety of organisms, as well as factors that affect a gene's duplicability--that is, the tendency of certain genes to retain more duplicates than others. In particular, two studies have looked at the correlation between gene duplicability and its degree in a protein-protein interaction network in yeast, mouse, and human, and another has looked at the correlation between gene duplicability and its complexity (length, number of domains, etc.) in yeast. In this paper, we extend these studies to six species, and two trends emerge. There is an increase in the duplicability-connectivity correlation that agrees with the increase in the genome size as well as the phylogenetic relationship of the species. Further, the duplicability-complexity correlation seems to be constant across the species. We argue that the observed correlations can be explained by neutral evolutionary forces acting on the genomic regions containing the genes. For the duplicability-connectivity correlation, we show through simulations that an increasing trend can be obtained by adjusting parameters to approximate genomic characteristics of the respective species. Our results call for more research into factors, adaptive and non-adaptive alike, that determine a gene's duplicability.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3439388?pdf=render
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AT pengdu geneduplicabilityconnectivitycomplexityacrossorganismsandaneutralevolutionaryexplanation
AT luaynakhleh geneduplicabilityconnectivitycomplexityacrossorganismsandaneutralevolutionaryexplanation
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