基因和基因组复制:剂量敏感性对核基因命运的影响。

Patrick P Edger, J Chris Pires
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引用次数: 337

摘要

在高等真核生物的进化过程中,包括基因丢失在内的全基因组复制(WGDs)是一个重要的重复过程。在二倍体化过程中,基因保留偏向于特定的功能基因类别。剂量敏感基因,包括转录因子,在WGDs后明显过度保留。相比之下,这些相同的功能基因类别在小规模重复(例如,局部和串联重复,片段重复,非整倍体)后表现出较低的保留率。鉴于这些最近的观察结果,我们回顾了当前解决重复事件后核基因命运的理论(即,功能获得假说,亚功能化假说,基因剂量增加假说,功能缓冲模型和基因平衡假说)。我们广泛地回顾了不同的剂量补偿机制,这些机制已经发展到减轻有害的剂量失衡。此外,我们研究了最近提出的基因平衡假说的扩展,以解释开花植物中特定功能类基因的共享单拷贝状态。我们推测,剂量敏感基因(如转录因子等调控基因)的优先保留和WGDs后基因的丢失分别在真核生物形态复杂性的发展和促进物种形成中发挥了重要作用。最后,我们将回顾最近的研究结果,这些发现表明多倍体谱系在大规模灭绝事件(包括白垩纪-第三纪(KT)灭绝)之后增加了存活率和物种形成率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Gene and genome duplications: the impact of dosage-sensitivity on the fate of nuclear genes.

Whole genome duplications (WGDs) followed by diploidization, which includes gene loss, have been an important recurrent process in the evolution of higher eukaryotes. Gene retention is biased to specific functional gene categories during diploidization. Dosage-sensitive genes, which include transcription factors, are significantly over-retained following WGDs. By contrast, these same functional gene categories exhibit lower retention rates following smaller scale duplications (e.g., local and tandem duplicates, segmental duplicates, aneuploidy). In light of these recent observations, we review current theories that address the fate of nuclear genes following duplication events (i.e., Gain of Function Hypothesis, Subfunctionalization Hypothesis, Increased Gene Dosage Hypothesis, Functional Buffering Model, and the Gene Balance Hypothesis). We broadly review different mechanisms of dosage-compensation that have evolved to alleviate harmful dosage-imbalances. In addition, we examine a recently proposed extension of the Gene Balance Hypothesis to explain the shared single copy status for a specific functional class of genes across the flowering plants. We speculate that the preferential retention of dosage-sensitive genes (e.g., regulatory genes such as transcription factors) and gene loss following WGDs has played a significant role in the development of morphological complexity in eukaryotes and facilitating speciation, respectively. Lastly, we will review recent findings that suggest polyploid lineages had increased rates of survival and speciation following mass extinction events, including the Cretaceous-Tertiary (KT) extinction.

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