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Publication year
2008Number of pages
12 p.
Source
Molecular Biology and Evolution, 25, 9, (2008), pp. 1909-1921ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Bioinformatics
CMBI
Biomolecular Chemistry
Cell biology
Former Organization
Bioinformatics (umcn)
Journal title
Molecular Biology and Evolution
Volume
vol. 25
Issue
iss. 9
Page start
p. 1909
Page end
p. 1921
Subject
Bio-Molecular Chemistry; Bioinformatics; IGMD 8: Mitochondrial medicine; NCMLS 2: Metabolism, transport and motion; NCMLS 4: Energy and redox metabolism; NCMLS 7: Chemical and physical biology; Research Programme of Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences; UMCN 5.3: Cellular energy metabolismAbstract
The orientation of closely linked genes in mammalian genomes is not random: there are more head-to-head (h2h) gene pairs than expected. To understand the origin of this enrichment in h2h gene pairs, we have analyzed the phylogenetic distribution of gene pairs separated by less than 600 bp of intergenic DNA (gene duos). We show here that a lack of head-to-tail (h2t) gene duos is an even more distinctive characteristic of mammalian genomes, with the platypus genome as the only exception. In nonmammalian vertebrate and in nonvertebrate genomes, the frequency of h2h, h2t, and tail-to-tail (t2t) gene duos is close to random. In tetrapod genomes, the h2t and t2t gene duos are more likely to be part of a larger gene cluster of closely spaced genes than h2h gene duos; in fish and urochordate genomes, the reverse is seen. In human and mouse tissues, the expression profiles of gene duos were skewed toward positive coexpression, irrespective of orientation. The organization of orthologs of both members of about 40% of the human gene duos could be traced in other species, enabling a prediction of the organization at the branch points of gnathostomes, tetrapods, amniotes, and euarchontoglires. The accumulation of h2h gene duos started in tetrapods, whereas that of h2t and t2t gene duos only started in amniotes. The apparent lack of evolutionary conservation of h2t and t2t gene duos relative to that of h2h gene duos is thus a result of their relatively late origin in the lineage leading to mammals; we show that once they are formed h2t and t2t gene duos are as stable as h2h gene duos.
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- Academic publications [226841]
- Electronic publications [108446]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [86405]
- Faculty of Science [33955]
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