De Novo, Divergence, and Mixed Origin Contribute to the Emergence of Orphan Genes in Pristionchus Nematodes

Homology is a fundamental concept in comparative biology. It is extensively used at the sequence level to make phylogenetic hypotheses and functional inferences. Nonetheless, the majority of eukaryotic genomes contain large numbers of orphan genes lacking homologs in other taxa. Generally, the fract...

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Main Authors: Neel Prabh, Christian Rödelsperger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2019-07-01
Series:G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://g3journal.org/lookup/doi/10.1534/g3.119.400326
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spelling doaj-0349b75cc5454348948048eca1413f472021-07-02T08:35:12ZengOxford University PressG3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics2160-18362019-07-01972277228610.1534/g3.119.40032621De Novo, Divergence, and Mixed Origin Contribute to the Emergence of Orphan Genes in Pristionchus NematodesNeel PrabhChristian RödelspergerHomology is a fundamental concept in comparative biology. It is extensively used at the sequence level to make phylogenetic hypotheses and functional inferences. Nonetheless, the majority of eukaryotic genomes contain large numbers of orphan genes lacking homologs in other taxa. Generally, the fraction of orphan genes is higher in genomically undersampled clades, and in the absence of closely related genomes any hypothesis about their origin and evolution remains untestable. Previously, we sequenced ten genomes with an underlying ladder-like phylogeny to establish a phylogenomic framework for studying genome evolution in diplogastrid nematodes. Here, we use this deeply sampled data set to understand the processes that generate orphan genes in our focal species Pristionchus pacificus. Based on phylostratigraphic analysis and additional bioinformatic filters, we obtained 29 high-confidence candidate genes for which mechanisms of orphan origin were proposed based on manual inspection. This revealed diverse mechanisms including annotation artifacts, chimeric origin, alternative reading frame usage, and gene splitting with subsequent gain of de novo exons. In addition, we present two cases of complete de novo origination from non-coding regions, which represents one of the first reports of de novo genes in nematodes. Thus, we conclude that de novo emergence, divergence, and mixed mechanisms contribute to novel gene formation in Pristionchus nematodes.http://g3journal.org/lookup/doi/10.1534/g3.119.400326Orphan genesde novo genestaxonomically-restrictedframe-shiftannotation artifacts
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Neel Prabh
Christian Rödelsperger
spellingShingle Neel Prabh
Christian Rödelsperger
De Novo, Divergence, and Mixed Origin Contribute to the Emergence of Orphan Genes in Pristionchus Nematodes
G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics
Orphan genes
de novo genes
taxonomically-restricted
frame-shift
annotation artifacts
author_facet Neel Prabh
Christian Rödelsperger
author_sort Neel Prabh
title De Novo, Divergence, and Mixed Origin Contribute to the Emergence of Orphan Genes in Pristionchus Nematodes
title_short De Novo, Divergence, and Mixed Origin Contribute to the Emergence of Orphan Genes in Pristionchus Nematodes
title_full De Novo, Divergence, and Mixed Origin Contribute to the Emergence of Orphan Genes in Pristionchus Nematodes
title_fullStr De Novo, Divergence, and Mixed Origin Contribute to the Emergence of Orphan Genes in Pristionchus Nematodes
title_full_unstemmed De Novo, Divergence, and Mixed Origin Contribute to the Emergence of Orphan Genes in Pristionchus Nematodes
title_sort de novo, divergence, and mixed origin contribute to the emergence of orphan genes in pristionchus nematodes
publisher Oxford University Press
series G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics
issn 2160-1836
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Homology is a fundamental concept in comparative biology. It is extensively used at the sequence level to make phylogenetic hypotheses and functional inferences. Nonetheless, the majority of eukaryotic genomes contain large numbers of orphan genes lacking homologs in other taxa. Generally, the fraction of orphan genes is higher in genomically undersampled clades, and in the absence of closely related genomes any hypothesis about their origin and evolution remains untestable. Previously, we sequenced ten genomes with an underlying ladder-like phylogeny to establish a phylogenomic framework for studying genome evolution in diplogastrid nematodes. Here, we use this deeply sampled data set to understand the processes that generate orphan genes in our focal species Pristionchus pacificus. Based on phylostratigraphic analysis and additional bioinformatic filters, we obtained 29 high-confidence candidate genes for which mechanisms of orphan origin were proposed based on manual inspection. This revealed diverse mechanisms including annotation artifacts, chimeric origin, alternative reading frame usage, and gene splitting with subsequent gain of de novo exons. In addition, we present two cases of complete de novo origination from non-coding regions, which represents one of the first reports of de novo genes in nematodes. Thus, we conclude that de novo emergence, divergence, and mixed mechanisms contribute to novel gene formation in Pristionchus nematodes.
topic Orphan genes
de novo genes
taxonomically-restricted
frame-shift
annotation artifacts
url http://g3journal.org/lookup/doi/10.1534/g3.119.400326
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