A genome-wide survey of changes in protein evolutionary rates across four closely related species of <it>Saccharomyces </it>sensu stricto group

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Changes in protein evolutionary rates among lineages have been frequently observed during periods of notable phenotypic evolution. It is also known that, following gene duplication and loss, the protein evolutionary rates of genes in...

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Main Authors: Imanishi Tadashi, Kawahara Yoshihiro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2007-01-01
Series:BMC Evolutionary Biology
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/7/9
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spelling doaj-a7a3384e83824f0e908b1baa4f4ad5f82021-09-02T09:04:19ZengBMCBMC Evolutionary Biology1471-21482007-01-0171910.1186/1471-2148-7-9A genome-wide survey of changes in protein evolutionary rates across four closely related species of <it>Saccharomyces </it>sensu stricto groupImanishi TadashiKawahara Yoshihiro<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Changes in protein evolutionary rates among lineages have been frequently observed during periods of notable phenotypic evolution. It is also known that, following gene duplication and loss, the protein evolutionary rates of genes involved in such events changed because of changes in functional constraints acting on the genes. However, in the evolution of closely related species, excluding the aforementioned situations, the frequency of changes in protein evolutionary rates is still not clear at the genome-wide level. Here we examine the constancy of protein evolutionary rates in the evolution of four closely related species of the <it>Saccharomyces </it>sensu stricto group (<it>S. cerevisiae</it>, <it>S. paradoxus</it>, <it>S. mikatae </it>and <it>S. bayanus</it>).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>For 2,610 unambiguously defined orthologous genes among the four species, we carried out likelihood ratio tests between constant-rate and variable-rate models and found 344 (13.2%) genes showing significant changes in the protein evolutionary rates in at least one lineage. Of all those genes which experienced rate changes, 139 and 49 genes showed accelerated and decelerated evolution, respectively. Most of the evolutionary rate changes could be attributed to changes in selective constraints acting on nonsynonymous sites, independently of species-specific gene duplication and loss. We estimated that the changes in protein evolutionary rates have appeared with a probability of 2.0 × 10<sup>-3 </sup>per gene per million years in the evolution of the <it>Saccharomyces </it>species. Furthermore, we found that the genes which experienced rate acceleration have lower expression levels and weaker codon usage bias than those which experienced rate deceleration.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Changes in protein evolutionary rates possibly occur frequently in the evolution of closely related <it>Saccharomyces </it>species. Selection for translational accuracy and efficiency may dominantly affect the variability of protein evolutionary rates.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/7/9
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Imanishi Tadashi
Kawahara Yoshihiro
spellingShingle Imanishi Tadashi
Kawahara Yoshihiro
A genome-wide survey of changes in protein evolutionary rates across four closely related species of <it>Saccharomyces </it>sensu stricto group
BMC Evolutionary Biology
author_facet Imanishi Tadashi
Kawahara Yoshihiro
author_sort Imanishi Tadashi
title A genome-wide survey of changes in protein evolutionary rates across four closely related species of <it>Saccharomyces </it>sensu stricto group
title_short A genome-wide survey of changes in protein evolutionary rates across four closely related species of <it>Saccharomyces </it>sensu stricto group
title_full A genome-wide survey of changes in protein evolutionary rates across four closely related species of <it>Saccharomyces </it>sensu stricto group
title_fullStr A genome-wide survey of changes in protein evolutionary rates across four closely related species of <it>Saccharomyces </it>sensu stricto group
title_full_unstemmed A genome-wide survey of changes in protein evolutionary rates across four closely related species of <it>Saccharomyces </it>sensu stricto group
title_sort genome-wide survey of changes in protein evolutionary rates across four closely related species of <it>saccharomyces </it>sensu stricto group
publisher BMC
series BMC Evolutionary Biology
issn 1471-2148
publishDate 2007-01-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Changes in protein evolutionary rates among lineages have been frequently observed during periods of notable phenotypic evolution. It is also known that, following gene duplication and loss, the protein evolutionary rates of genes involved in such events changed because of changes in functional constraints acting on the genes. However, in the evolution of closely related species, excluding the aforementioned situations, the frequency of changes in protein evolutionary rates is still not clear at the genome-wide level. Here we examine the constancy of protein evolutionary rates in the evolution of four closely related species of the <it>Saccharomyces </it>sensu stricto group (<it>S. cerevisiae</it>, <it>S. paradoxus</it>, <it>S. mikatae </it>and <it>S. bayanus</it>).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>For 2,610 unambiguously defined orthologous genes among the four species, we carried out likelihood ratio tests between constant-rate and variable-rate models and found 344 (13.2%) genes showing significant changes in the protein evolutionary rates in at least one lineage. Of all those genes which experienced rate changes, 139 and 49 genes showed accelerated and decelerated evolution, respectively. Most of the evolutionary rate changes could be attributed to changes in selective constraints acting on nonsynonymous sites, independently of species-specific gene duplication and loss. We estimated that the changes in protein evolutionary rates have appeared with a probability of 2.0 × 10<sup>-3 </sup>per gene per million years in the evolution of the <it>Saccharomyces </it>species. Furthermore, we found that the genes which experienced rate acceleration have lower expression levels and weaker codon usage bias than those which experienced rate deceleration.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Changes in protein evolutionary rates possibly occur frequently in the evolution of closely related <it>Saccharomyces </it>species. Selection for translational accuracy and efficiency may dominantly affect the variability of protein evolutionary rates.</p>
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/7/9
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