Sense-antisense gene overlap is probably a cause for retaining the few introns in Giardia genome and the implications

Abstract Background It is widely accepted that the last eukaryotic common ancestor and early eukaryotes were intron-rich and intron loss dominated subsequent evolution, thus the presence of only very few introns in some modern eukaryotes must be the consequence of massive loss. But it is striking th...

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Main Authors: Min Xue, Bing Chen, Qingqing Ye, Jingru Shao, Zhangxia Lyu, Jianfan Wen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-10-01
Series:Biology Direct
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13062-018-0226-5
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spelling doaj-9f6bfc5e8e204c61b24abbc9762be1362020-11-25T01:17:20ZengBMCBiology Direct1745-61502018-10-011311710.1186/s13062-018-0226-5Sense-antisense gene overlap is probably a cause for retaining the few introns in Giardia genome and the implicationsMin Xue0Bing Chen1Qingqing Ye2Jingru Shao3Zhangxia Lyu4Jianfan Wen5State Key Laboratory of Genetic Resources and Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of SciencesState Key Laboratory of Genetic Resources and Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of SciencesState Key Laboratory of Genetic Resources and Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of SciencesState Key Laboratory of Genetic Resources and Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of SciencesState Key Laboratory of Genetic Resources and Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of SciencesState Key Laboratory of Genetic Resources and Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of SciencesAbstract Background It is widely accepted that the last eukaryotic common ancestor and early eukaryotes were intron-rich and intron loss dominated subsequent evolution, thus the presence of only very few introns in some modern eukaryotes must be the consequence of massive loss. But it is striking that few eukaryotes were found to have completely lost introns. Despite extensive research, the causes of massive intron losses remain elusive. Actually the reverse question -- how the few introns can be retained under the evolutionary selection pressure of intron loss -- is equally significant but was rarely studied, except that it was conjectured that the essential functions of some introns prevent their loss. The situation that extremely few (eight) spliceosome-mediated cis-spliced introns present in the relatively simple genome of Giardia lamblia provides an excellent opportunity to explore this question. Results Our investigation found three types of distribution patterns of the few introns in the intron-containing genes: ancient intron in ancient gene, later-evolved intron in ancient gene, and later-evolved intron in later-evolved gene, which can reflect to some extent the dynamic evolution of introns in Giardia. Without finding any special features or functional importance of these introns responsible for their retention, we noticed and experimentally verified that some intron-containing genes form sense-antisense gene pairs with transcribable genes on their complementary strands, and that the introns just reside in the overlapping regions. Conclusions In Giardia’s evolution, despite constant evolutionary selection pressure of intron loss, intron gain can still occur in both ancient and later-evolved genes, but only a few introns are retained; at least the evolutionary retention of some of the introns might not be due to the functional constraint of the introns themselves but the causes outside of introns, such as the constraints imposed by other genomic functional elements overlapping with the introns. These findings can not only provide some clues to find new genomic functional elements -- in the areas overlapping with introns, but suggest that “functional constraint” of introns may not be necessarily directly associated with intron loss and gain, and that the real functions are probably still outside of our current knowledge. Reviewers This article was reviewed by Mikhail Gelfand, Michael Gray, and Igor Rogozin.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13062-018-0226-5Evolutionary retention of intronsGene overlapIntron evolutionGenome evolutionGiardia lamblia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Min Xue
Bing Chen
Qingqing Ye
Jingru Shao
Zhangxia Lyu
Jianfan Wen
spellingShingle Min Xue
Bing Chen
Qingqing Ye
Jingru Shao
Zhangxia Lyu
Jianfan Wen
Sense-antisense gene overlap is probably a cause for retaining the few introns in Giardia genome and the implications
Biology Direct
Evolutionary retention of introns
Gene overlap
Intron evolution
Genome evolution
Giardia lamblia
author_facet Min Xue
Bing Chen
Qingqing Ye
Jingru Shao
Zhangxia Lyu
Jianfan Wen
author_sort Min Xue
title Sense-antisense gene overlap is probably a cause for retaining the few introns in Giardia genome and the implications
title_short Sense-antisense gene overlap is probably a cause for retaining the few introns in Giardia genome and the implications
title_full Sense-antisense gene overlap is probably a cause for retaining the few introns in Giardia genome and the implications
title_fullStr Sense-antisense gene overlap is probably a cause for retaining the few introns in Giardia genome and the implications
title_full_unstemmed Sense-antisense gene overlap is probably a cause for retaining the few introns in Giardia genome and the implications
title_sort sense-antisense gene overlap is probably a cause for retaining the few introns in giardia genome and the implications
publisher BMC
series Biology Direct
issn 1745-6150
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Abstract Background It is widely accepted that the last eukaryotic common ancestor and early eukaryotes were intron-rich and intron loss dominated subsequent evolution, thus the presence of only very few introns in some modern eukaryotes must be the consequence of massive loss. But it is striking that few eukaryotes were found to have completely lost introns. Despite extensive research, the causes of massive intron losses remain elusive. Actually the reverse question -- how the few introns can be retained under the evolutionary selection pressure of intron loss -- is equally significant but was rarely studied, except that it was conjectured that the essential functions of some introns prevent their loss. The situation that extremely few (eight) spliceosome-mediated cis-spliced introns present in the relatively simple genome of Giardia lamblia provides an excellent opportunity to explore this question. Results Our investigation found three types of distribution patterns of the few introns in the intron-containing genes: ancient intron in ancient gene, later-evolved intron in ancient gene, and later-evolved intron in later-evolved gene, which can reflect to some extent the dynamic evolution of introns in Giardia. Without finding any special features or functional importance of these introns responsible for their retention, we noticed and experimentally verified that some intron-containing genes form sense-antisense gene pairs with transcribable genes on their complementary strands, and that the introns just reside in the overlapping regions. Conclusions In Giardia’s evolution, despite constant evolutionary selection pressure of intron loss, intron gain can still occur in both ancient and later-evolved genes, but only a few introns are retained; at least the evolutionary retention of some of the introns might not be due to the functional constraint of the introns themselves but the causes outside of introns, such as the constraints imposed by other genomic functional elements overlapping with the introns. These findings can not only provide some clues to find new genomic functional elements -- in the areas overlapping with introns, but suggest that “functional constraint” of introns may not be necessarily directly associated with intron loss and gain, and that the real functions are probably still outside of our current knowledge. Reviewers This article was reviewed by Mikhail Gelfand, Michael Gray, and Igor Rogozin.
topic Evolutionary retention of introns
Gene overlap
Intron evolution
Genome evolution
Giardia lamblia
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13062-018-0226-5
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