Relaxed purifying selection and possibly high rate of adaptation in primate lineage-specific genes
Genome Biol Evol. 2010 Jul 12;2:393-409. Print 2010.
Relaxed purifying selection and possibly high rate of
adaptation in primate lineage-specific genes.
Cai JJ, Petrov DA.
Genes in the same organism vary in the time since their
evolutionary origin. Without horizontal gene transfer, young genes
are necessarily restricted to a few closely related species,
whereas old genes can be broadly distributed across the phylogeny.
It has been shown that young genes evolve faster than old genes;
however, the evolutionary forces responsible for this pattern
remain obscure. Here, we classify human-chimp protein-coding genes
into different age classes, according to the breath of their
phylogenetic distribution. We estimate the strength of purifying
selection and the rate of adaptive selection for genes in different
age classes. We find that older genes carry fewer and less frequent
nonsynonymous single-nucleotide polymorphisms than younger genes
suggesting that older genes experience a stronger purifying
selection at the protein-coding level. We infer the distribution of
fitness effects of new deleterious mutations and find that older
genes have proportionally more slightly deleterious mutations and
fewer nearly neutral mutations than younger genes. To investigate
the role of adaptive selection of genes in different age classes,
we determine the selection coefficient (gamma = 2N(e)s) of genes
using the MKPRF approach and estimate the ratio of the rate of
adaptive nonsynonymous substitution to synonymous substitution
(omega(A)) using the DoFE method. Although the proportion of
positively selected genes (gamma > 0) is significantly higher in
younger genes, we find no correlation between omega(A) and gene
age. Collectively, these results provide strong evidence that
younger genes are subject to weaker purifying selection and more
tenuous evidence that they also undergo adaptive evolution more
frequently.
PMID: 20624743 [PubMed - in process] Free Article
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