scholarly journals Stepwise Evolution of Essential Centromere Function in a Drosophila Neogene

Science ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 340 (6137) ◽  
pp. 1211-1214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin D. Ross ◽  
Leah Rosin ◽  
Andreas W. Thomae ◽  
Mary Alice Hiatt ◽  
Danielle Vermaak ◽  
...  

Evolutionarily young genes that serve essential functions represent a paradox; they must perform a function that either was not required until after their birth or was redundant with another gene. How young genes rapidly acquire essential function is largely unknown. We traced the evolutionary steps by which the Drosophila gene Umbrea acquired an essential role in chromosome segregation in D. melanogaster since the gene's origin less than 15 million years ago. Umbrea neofunctionalization occurred via loss of an ancestral heterochromatin-localizing domain, followed by alterations that rewired its protein interaction network and led to species-specific centromere localization. Our evolutionary cell biology approach provides temporal and mechanistic detail about how young genes gain essential function. Such innovations may constantly alter the repertoire of centromeric proteins in eukaryotes.

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Li ◽  
R Wernersson ◽  
RB Hansen ◽  
H Horn ◽  
JM Mercer ◽  
...  

Human protein-protein interaction networks are critical to understanding cell biology and interpreting genetic and genomic data, but are challenging to produce in individual large-scale experiments. We describe a general computational framework that through data integration and quality control provides a scored human protein-protein interaction network (InWeb_IM). Juxtaposed with five comparable resources, InWeb_IM has 2.8 times more interactions (~585K) and a superior functional signal showing that the added interactions reflect real cellular biology. InWeb_IM is a versatile resource for accurate and cost-efficient functional interpretation of massive genomic datasets illustrated by annotating candidate genes from >4,700 cancer genomes and genes involved in neuropsychiatric diseases.


2012 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 139
Author(s):  
Chunlei JIANG ◽  
rui ZHAO ◽  
Lingfeng Lü ◽  
Dairong QIAO ◽  
Yi CAO

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