scholarly journals Evolutionary history of the human multigene families reveals widespread gene duplications throughout the history of animals

2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nashaiman Pervaiz ◽  
Nazia Shakeel ◽  
Ayesha Qasim ◽  
Rabail Zehra ◽  
Saneela Anwar ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (12) ◽  
pp. 3563-3575 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan David Bayona-Serrano ◽  
Vincent Louis Viala ◽  
Rhett M Rautsaw ◽  
Tristan D Schramer ◽  
Gesiele A Barros-Carvalho ◽  
...  

Abstract Novel phenotypes are commonly associated with gene duplications and neofunctionalization, less documented are the cases of phenotypic maintenance through the recruitment of novel genes. Proteolysis is the primary toxic character of many snake venoms, and ADAM metalloproteinases, named snake venom metalloproteinases (SVMPs), are largely recognized as the major effectors of this phenotype. However, by investigating original transcriptomes from 58 species of advanced snakes (Caenophidia) across their phylogeny, we discovered that a different enzyme, matrix metalloproteinase (MMP), is actually the dominant venom component in three tribes (Tachymenini, Xenodontini, and Conophiini) of rear-fanged snakes (Dipsadidae). Proteomic and functional analyses of these venoms further indicate that MMPs are likely playing an “SVMP-like” function in the proteolytic phenotype. A detailed look into the venom-specific sequences revealed a new highly expressed MMP subtype, named snake venom MMP (svMMP), which originated independently on at least three occasions from an endogenous MMP-9. We further show that by losing ancillary noncatalytic domains present in its ancestors, svMMPs followed an evolutionary path toward a simplified structure during their expansion in the genomes, thus paralleling what has been proposed for the evolution of their Viperidae counterparts, the SVMPs. Moreover, we inferred an inverse relationship between the expression of svMMPs and SVMPs along the evolutionary history of Xenodontinae, pointing out that one type of enzyme may be substituting for the other, whereas the general (metallo)proteolytic phenotype is maintained. These results provide rare evidence on how relevant phenotypic traits can be optimized via natural selection on nonhomologous genes, yielding alternate biochemical components.


2018 ◽  
Vol 285 (1892) ◽  
pp. 20182180 ◽  
Author(s):  
James F. Fleming ◽  
Reinhardt Møbjerg Kristensen ◽  
Martin Vinther Sørensen ◽  
Tae-Yoon S. Park ◽  
Kazuharu Arakawa ◽  
...  

Colour vision is known to have arisen only twice—once in Vertebrata and once within the Ecdysozoa, in Arthropoda. However, the evolutionary history of ecdysozoan vision is unclear. At the molecular level, visual pigments, composed of a chromophore and a protein belonging to the opsin family, have different spectral sensitivities and these mediate colour vision. At the morphological level, ecdysozoan vision is conveyed by eyes of variable levels of complexity; from the simple ocelli observed in the velvet worms (phylum Onychophora) to the marvellously complex eyes of insects, spiders, and crustaceans. Here, we explore the evolution of ecdysozoan vision at both the molecular and morphological level; combining analysis of a large-scale opsin dataset that includes previously unknown ecdysozoan opsins with morphological analyses of key Cambrian fossils with preserved eye structures. We found that while several non-arthropod ecdysozoan lineages have multiple opsins, arthropod multi-opsin vision evolved through a series of gene duplications that were fixed in a period of 35–71 million years (Ma) along the stem arthropod lineage. Our integrative study of the fossil and molecular record of vision indicates that fossils with more complex eyes were likely to have possessed a larger complement of opsin genes.


PeerJ ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. e12174
Author(s):  
Yang Xiao ◽  
Jun Wen ◽  
Ran Meng ◽  
Ying Meng ◽  
Qiang Zhou ◽  
...  

The CYP75 gene family plays an important role in flavonoid biosynthesis in plants. Little is known about the evolution of the gene family within the grape family. Here, we extracted the CYP75 genes from transcriptome data of 15 grape species and 36 representative genomes from other plants to explore the evolutionary history of the CYP75 gene family in Vitaceae. The structure of the CYP75 protein sequences is highly conserved with the variation mainly occurring in the N terminal and the middle region. The evolutionary analyses suggested classifying the CYP75 gene family into three groups in Vitaceae, namely Vitaceae A1, Vitaceae A2 and Vitaceae B. The Vitaceae A1 and A2 belong to the CYP75A subfamily and the Vitaceae B belongs to the CYP75B subfamily. Within the Vitaceae A1, most Vitaceae taxa present only one copy of the CYP75A protein sequence except for Vitis vinifera with a high number of sequences, which might have originated through recent gene duplications after its split from the other species. Vitaceae A2 contain only CYP75A sequences from Vitaceae sister to one from Camellia sinensis, probably representing a relict lineage. The CYP75B proteins were found to be dominated in Vitaceae and other angiosperms. Our results provide important insights into understanding the evolutionary history of the CYP75 gene family in Vitaceae and other angiosperms.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zuzana Musilova ◽  
Fabio Cortesi

Vertebrates have four visual cone opsin classes that, together with a light-sensitive chromophore, provide sensitivity from the ultraviolet to the red wavelengths of light. The rhodopsin-like 2 (RH2) opsin is sensitive to the centre blue-green part of the spectrum, which is the most prevalent light underwater. While various vertebrate groups such as mammals and sharks have lost the RH2 gene, in teleost fishes this opsin has continued to proliferate. By investigating the genomes of 115 teleost species, we find that RH2 shows an extremely dynamic evolutionary history with repeated gene duplications, gene losses and gene conversion affecting entire orders, families and species. At least four ancestral duplications provided the substrate for todays RH2 diversity with duplications occurring in the common ancestors of Clupeocephala, Neoteleostei, and Acanthopterygii. Following these events, RH2 has continued to duplicate both in tandem and during lineage specific genome duplications. However, it has also been lost many times over so that in the genomes of extant teleosts, we find between zero to eight RH2 copies. Using retinal transcriptomes in a phylogenetic representative dataset of 30 species, we show that RH2 is expressed as the dominant green-sensitive opsin in almost all fish lineages. The exceptions are the Osteoglossomorpha (bony tongues and mooneyes) and several characin species that have lost RH2, and tarpons, other characins and gobies which do not or only lowly express the gene. These fishes instead express a green-shifted long-wavelength-sensitive LWS opsin. Our study highlights the strength of using modern genomic tools within a comparative framework to elucidate the detailed evolutionary history of gene families.


Science ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 347 (6222) ◽  
pp. 621.2-621 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacob O. Brunkard ◽  
Anne M. Runkel ◽  
Patricia C. Zambryski

Sayou et al. (Reports, 7 February 2014, p. 645) proposed a new model for evolution of transcription factors without gene duplication, using LEAFY as an archetype. Their proposal contradicts the evolutionary history of plants and ignores evidence that LEAFY evolves through gene duplications. Within their data set, we identified a moss with multiple LEAFY orthologs, which contests their model and supports that LEAFY evolves through duplications.


2018 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Arceneaux

AbstractIntuitions guide decision-making, and looking to the evolutionary history of humans illuminates why some behavioral responses are more intuitive than others. Yet a place remains for cognitive processes to second-guess intuitive responses – that is, to be reflective – and individual differences abound in automatic, intuitive processing as well.


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