Functional divergence of gene duplicates – a domain-centric view

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Gene duplicates have been shown to evolve at different rates. Here we further investigate the mechanism and functional underpinning of this phenomenon by assessing asymmetric evolution specifically within functional domains of gene d...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Khaladkar Mugdha, Hannenhalli Sridhar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-07-01
Series:BMC Evolutionary Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/12/126
id doaj-f3520414945840f8b4db362eb218ae1f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f3520414945840f8b4db362eb218ae1f2021-09-02T16:53:59ZengBMCBMC Evolutionary Biology1471-21482012-07-0112112610.1186/1471-2148-12-126Functional divergence of gene duplicates – a domain-centric viewKhaladkar MugdhaHannenhalli Sridhar<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Gene duplicates have been shown to evolve at different rates. Here we further investigate the mechanism and functional underpinning of this phenomenon by assessing asymmetric evolution specifically within functional domains of gene duplicates.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Based on duplicate genes in five teleost fishes resulting from a whole genome duplication event, we first show that a Fisher Exact test based approach to detect asymmetry is more sensitive than the previously used Likelihood Ratio test. Using our Fisher Exact test, we found that the evolutionary rate asymmetry in the overall protein is largely explained by the asymmetric evolution within specific protein domains. Moreover, among cases of asymmetrically evolving domains, for the gene copy containing a fast evolving domain, the non-synonymous substitutions often cluster within the fast evolving domain. We found that rare substitutions were preferred within asymmetrically evolving domains suggestive of functional divergence. While overall ~32 % of the domains tested were found to be evolving asymmetrically, certain protein domains such as the Tyrosine and Ser/Thr Kinase domains had a much greater prevalence of asymmetric evolution. Finally, based on the spatial expression of Zebra fish duplicate proteins during development, we found that protein pairs containing asymmetrically evolving domains had a greater divergence in gene expression as compared to the duplicate proteins that did not exhibit asymmetric evolution.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Taken together, our results suggest that the previously observed asymmetry in the overall duplicate protein evolution is largely due to divergence of specific domains of the protein, and coincides with divergence in spatial expression domains.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/12/126Gene duplicationWhole genome duplicationComputational biologyEvolution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Khaladkar Mugdha
Hannenhalli Sridhar
spellingShingle Khaladkar Mugdha
Hannenhalli Sridhar
Functional divergence of gene duplicates – a domain-centric view
BMC Evolutionary Biology
Gene duplication
Whole genome duplication
Computational biology
Evolution
author_facet Khaladkar Mugdha
Hannenhalli Sridhar
author_sort Khaladkar Mugdha
title Functional divergence of gene duplicates – a domain-centric view
title_short Functional divergence of gene duplicates – a domain-centric view
title_full Functional divergence of gene duplicates – a domain-centric view
title_fullStr Functional divergence of gene duplicates – a domain-centric view
title_full_unstemmed Functional divergence of gene duplicates – a domain-centric view
title_sort functional divergence of gene duplicates – a domain-centric view
publisher BMC
series BMC Evolutionary Biology
issn 1471-2148
publishDate 2012-07-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Gene duplicates have been shown to evolve at different rates. Here we further investigate the mechanism and functional underpinning of this phenomenon by assessing asymmetric evolution specifically within functional domains of gene duplicates.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Based on duplicate genes in five teleost fishes resulting from a whole genome duplication event, we first show that a Fisher Exact test based approach to detect asymmetry is more sensitive than the previously used Likelihood Ratio test. Using our Fisher Exact test, we found that the evolutionary rate asymmetry in the overall protein is largely explained by the asymmetric evolution within specific protein domains. Moreover, among cases of asymmetrically evolving domains, for the gene copy containing a fast evolving domain, the non-synonymous substitutions often cluster within the fast evolving domain. We found that rare substitutions were preferred within asymmetrically evolving domains suggestive of functional divergence. While overall ~32 % of the domains tested were found to be evolving asymmetrically, certain protein domains such as the Tyrosine and Ser/Thr Kinase domains had a much greater prevalence of asymmetric evolution. Finally, based on the spatial expression of Zebra fish duplicate proteins during development, we found that protein pairs containing asymmetrically evolving domains had a greater divergence in gene expression as compared to the duplicate proteins that did not exhibit asymmetric evolution.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Taken together, our results suggest that the previously observed asymmetry in the overall duplicate protein evolution is largely due to divergence of specific domains of the protein, and coincides with divergence in spatial expression domains.</p>
topic Gene duplication
Whole genome duplication
Computational biology
Evolution
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/12/126
work_keys_str_mv AT khaladkarmugdha functionaldivergenceofgeneduplicatesadomaincentricview
AT hannenhallisridhar functionaldivergenceofgeneduplicatesadomaincentricview
_version_ 1721172708791681024