2014
DOI: 10.1101/gr.173740.114
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Differential retention and divergent resolution of duplicate genes following whole-genome duplication

Abstract: The Paramecium aurelia complex is a group of 15 species that share at least three past whole-genome duplications (WGDs). The macronuclear genome sequences of P. biaurelia and P. sexaurelia are presented and compared to the published sequence of P. tetraurelia. Levels of duplicate-gene retention from the recent WGD differ by >10% across species, with P. sexaurelia losing significantly more genes than P. biaurelia or P. tetraurelia. In addition, historically high rates of gene conversion have homogenized WGD par… Show more

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Cited by 111 publications
(107 citation statements)
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“…Ohno (1970) proposed an important theory that explains the enhanced evolutionary capability of polyploid genomes, stating that the emergence of functionally redundant genes would relax their evolutionary constraints and accelerate divergent evolution of their functions. This theory has been confirmed in a wide range of eukaryotes from ancient Vertebrata (Brunet et al 2006), Saccharomycetaceae fungi (Kellis et al 2004;Byrne and Wolfe 2007), Paramecia (McGrath et al 2014), and Brassicaceae plants (Arabidopsis Genome Initiative 2000; Vision et al 2000). Nonetheless, although these studies established long-term benefits of polyploidization, early consequences and mechanisms of polyploidization remain largely unexplored.…”
Section: [Supplemental Materials Is Available For This Article]mentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Ohno (1970) proposed an important theory that explains the enhanced evolutionary capability of polyploid genomes, stating that the emergence of functionally redundant genes would relax their evolutionary constraints and accelerate divergent evolution of their functions. This theory has been confirmed in a wide range of eukaryotes from ancient Vertebrata (Brunet et al 2006), Saccharomycetaceae fungi (Kellis et al 2004;Byrne and Wolfe 2007), Paramecia (McGrath et al 2014), and Brassicaceae plants (Arabidopsis Genome Initiative 2000; Vision et al 2000). Nonetheless, although these studies established long-term benefits of polyploidization, early consequences and mechanisms of polyploidization remain largely unexplored.…”
Section: [Supplemental Materials Is Available For This Article]mentioning
confidence: 97%
“…However, we did not observe any significant relationship between the decelerated genes and gene ontology annotations or numbers of protein interaction partners (S. cerevisiae gene annotation and protein-protein interaction data sets were used) (Methods). An alternative explanation could be that gene conversion-a mechanism capable of preserving and homogenizing homeolog sequences and functions (Takuno et al 2008;McGrath et al 2014)-removed nonsynonymous mutations from these genes. Because gene conversions create long identical sequence tracts between homeologs, we utilized these signatures to probe for evidence of gene conversions among hybrid homeologs (Methods).…”
Section: Global Deceleration Of Evolutionary Rates Following Genome Hmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In a WGD that happened in the ancestor of teleost fish about 300 million years ago, many duplicate pairs persisted for over 200 million years before a member of the pair was lost (Blomme et al 2006;Brunet et al 2006;Sato et al 2009). Delayed loss of duplicates long after a WGD is also seen in Paramecium species (McGrath et al 2014b). Together these patterns indicate that many duplicates after WGDs are dosage sensitive and evolve in two phases: an initial prolonged phase where both duplicates evolve under selection that conserves function and a later phase in which a duplicate is lost.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 72%
“…(Figure 4 shows the impact of increasing D* on the time until duplicate loss.) Both yeast and paramecia show just this pattern: there is a positive correlation between expression levels and the longevity of duplicated genes following WGD (Seoighe and Wolfe 1999;Aury et al 2006;Gout et al 2010;McGrath et al 2014b). To explain this pattern, Gout et al (2010) argued that stabilizing selection on total expression is stronger on dosage-sensitive duplicates that have high levels of expression.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%