Asymmetric Sequence Divergence of Duplicate Genes Experimented By: Gavin Conant and Andreas Wagner Presented By: Jennifer Case and Jonathan Hobbs.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Evolution of genomes.
Advertisements

Quick Lesson on dN/dS Neutral Selection Codon Degeneracy Synonymous vs. Non-synonymous dN/dS ratios Why Selection? The Problem.
EVOLUTIONARY CHANGE IN DNA SEQUENCES - usually too slow to monitor directly… … so use comparative analysis of 2 sequences which share a common ancestor.
Plant of the day! Pebble plants, Lithops, dwarf xerophytes Aizoaceae
12-4 & 5 Mutations.
Molecular Evolution Revised 29/12/06
The origins & evolution of genome complexity Seth Donoughe Lynch & Conery (2003)
Sequence similarity.
Chapter 8 Section 8.7: Mutations.
Adaptive Molecular Evolution Nonsynonymous vs Synonymous.
Lecture 12 Splicing and gene prediction in eukaryotes
Active Lecture Questions for BIOLOGY, Eighth Edition Neil Campbell & Jane Reece Questions prepared by Jung Choi, Georgia Institute of Technology Copyright.
TGCAAACTCAAACTCTTTTGTTGTTCTTACTGTATCATTGCCCAGAATAT TCTGCCTGTCTTTAGAGGCTAATACATTGATTAGTGAATTCCAATGGGCA GAATCGTGATGCATTAAAGAGATGCTAATATTTTCACTGCTCCTCAATTT.
- any detectable change in DNA sequence eg. errors in DNA replication/repair - inherited ones of interest in evolutionary studies Deleterious - will be.
Origins and impact of constraints in evolution of gene families Boris E. Shakhnovich and Eugene V.Koonin Genome Research 2006, October 19 Stella Veretnik.
In the deterministic model, the time till fixation depends on the selective advantage, but fixation is guaranteed.
Lecture 25 - Phylogeny Based on Chapter 23 - Molecular Evolution Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education Inc.
Bioinformatics 2011 Molecular Evolution Revised 29/12/06.
The Biology and Genetic Base of Cancer. 2 (Mutation)
TGCAAACTCAAACTCTTTTGTTGTTCTTACTGTATCATTGCCCAGAATAT TCTGCCTGTCTTTAGAGGCTAATACATTGATTAGTGAATTCCAATGGGCA GAATCGTGATGCATTAAAGAGATGCTAATATTTTCACTGCTCCTCAATTT.
Click to edit Master title style Click to edit Master subtitle style CLICKER QUESTIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry,
Comp. Genomics Recitation 3 The statistics of database searching.
Gene Regulations and Mutations
Models of Molecular Evolution III Level 3 Molecular Evolution and Bioinformatics Jim Provan Page and Holmes: Sections 7.5 – 7.8.
Scientific Method Probability and Significance Probability Q: What does ‘probability’ mean? A: The likelihood that something will happen Probability.
Cédric Notredame (08/12/2015) Molecular Evolution Cédric Notredame.
Paper Review on Cross- species Microarray Comparison Hong Lu
Mutations.
Types of mutations Mutations are changes in the genetic material
12-4 MUTATIONS. I. KINDS OF MUTATIONS 1. Mutation- change in genetic material that can result from incorrect DNA replication 2. Point Mutations- gene.
What ’ s the Purpose of All This DNA Stuff? *Sequence of nitrogen bases along the DNA strand (genes) code for an amino acid sequence (which make up proteins)
Point Mutations Silent Missense Nonsense Frameshift.
The statistics of pairwise alignment BMI/CS 576 Colin Dewey Fall 2015.
Expressional and Functional Divergences between Duplicate Genes Wen-Hsiung Li University of Chicago.
 During replication (in DNA), an error may be made that causes changes in the mRNA and proteins made from that part of the DNA  These errors or changes.
Entry Task: Lab Notebook 5/12/15 Is this evolution? In at least four written sentences, explain why or why not. Support your reasoning with science thinking!
Welcome 1/26-27/16  In your journal, write a paragraph explain what a genetic code is and the purpose of transcription and translation.  Turn in Snork.
Slide 1 of 24 VIII MUTATIONS Mutations Types of Mutations:
Slide 1 of 24 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Biology.
Schematic of Eukaryotic Protein-Coding Locus
FROM GENE TO PROTEIN: TRANSLATION & MUTATIONS Chapter
4.12 DNA and Mutations. Quick DNA Review Base pairing Base pairing.
Substitution Matrices and Alignment Statistics BMI/CS 776 Mark Craven February 2002.
LBA ProtPars. LBA Prot Dist no Gamma and no alignment.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Neutrality Test First suggested by Kimura (1968) and King and Jukes (1969) Shift to using neutrality as a null hypothesis in positive selection and selection.
Pipelines for Computational Analysis (Bioinformatics)
From Gene to Protein: Translation & Mutations
Mutations Chapter 12-4.
12- 4 Mutations.
Distances.
MUTATIONS.
Mutations TSW identify and describe the various types of mutations and their effects.
What are the Patterns Of Nucleotide Substitution Within Coding and
Chapter 17 Hon. Adv. Biology Notes 12/01/06
First Draft of Chimpanzee Genome
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
MUTATIONS.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
MUTATIONS.
Read the lab handout COMPLETELY
Mutation Notes.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Study phylogeny in the context of species evolution
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Presentation transcript:

Asymmetric Sequence Divergence of Duplicate Genes Experimented By: Gavin Conant and Andreas Wagner Presented By: Jennifer Case and Jonathan Hobbs

What are Gene Duplications? Duplication: More than one copy of a particular chromosomal segment in a chromosome set

Why Study Duplications? Why are they important? What can duplications tell us?

Divergence Divergence is an important process for driving evolutionary changes.

Necessary Vocabulary K a - amino acid (non-synonymous) substitutions K s - silent (synonymous) substitutions P - probability of reoccurrances happening by chance alone X 2 - a goodness-of-fit test r - a statistical association s - a statistical association

Methods Considered Nucleotide-based tests Amino Acid-based tests Codon-based tests

Purpose of this experiment 1. Test the number of pairs with asymmetric Ka values that can be explained by the 5% error rate of our individual hypothesis tests. 2. Test to see if asymmetric a.a. divergence is coupled to greater functional divergence in one of two duplicate genes.

First Hypothesis “…the number of pairs with asymmetrical Ka values could be explained by a 5% error rate…”

Methods for Hypothesis 1 Codon Model--allows for the possibility that duplicate genes evolve independently. 2 duplicate genes and one outgroup gene are found

Methods for Hypothesis 1 Likelihood Ratio Test x 2 analysis P (probability) significance

[Ka] asymmetrical in 5% error Everything that was more significant than 5% supports the hypothesis, everything 5% or under rejects it.

Results for Hypothesis 1 Special results:  Fission Yeast Outgroup gene is very distant from duplicates  Fruit Fly Lysozyme D Gene Family Chitanase  Worm 7-helix transmembrane chemoreceptor domains

Results for Hypothesis 1 Unsaturated nucleotide sequence- Sites that have not begun to back mutate.

Discussion for Hypothesis 1 An average genome contains at least 20% of gene duplicates that diverge asymmetrically.  Larger numbers with larger data (ex. worm and fruit fly) Differs from other studies  different approaches  different models

Second Hypothesis “…tested the hypothesis that asymmetric amino acid divergence is coupled to greater gene expression divergence in one of two duplicate genes.”

Methods for Hypothesis 2 2 questions were asked in this part of the experiment  1.) Is there association between sequence asymmetry and expression divergence? 2.) Is there association between sequence asymmetry and asymmetry of expression divergence?

Methods for Hypothesis 2 To answer first question:  Only used the two duplicates because of lack of sequence data.  Used eleven different experimental conditions for data acquisition.  Found log 2 -transformed ratios  Compared normalized difference to the different in the transformed ratios.

Methods for Hypothesis 2 To answer 2nd question:  gene under-expression by at least two-fold  Compared Found value to the normalized value

Results for Hypothesis 2 mRNA microarray data  no significant correlation between degree of asymmetry and divergence in expression level calculated statistical association between asymmetry in expression level and asymmetry in K a  Found no significant association

Discussion for Hypothesis 2 What is the significance of having no significant correlation between sequence asymmetry and:  expression divergence  asymmetry of expression divergence

Selection Process 2 Forces can drive asymmetric divergence  relaxed selective constraints sequence divergence is neutral  directional or positive selection the rate of K a /K s is greater than 1 advantageous mutations play a key role in divergence.

Results for Selection Process Statistical association between asymmetry in amino acid divergence and evolutionary constraints on duplicate pairs. (K a /K s )

Results for Selection Process They found:  in yeast weakly significant correlation between asymmetry and selective constraints  in fruit fly and worm highly significant correlation between asymmetry and selective constraints

To Test for Positive Selection Triplet-based Method vs. Pairwise Method

Discussion for Selection Process It appears as though relaxed selective constraints may be largely responsible for asymmetric divergence Not necessarily the case!  Positive Selection acts fast and in a small area so it can be difficult to detect.  Need more than just the sequence to tell if positive selection has taken place.  Probably BOTH are largely responsible depending on which gene is in question