Timing of Genome Duplications Relative to the Origin of the Vertebrates: Did Cyclostomes Diverge before or after?

被引:240
|
作者
Kuraku, Shigehiro [1 ,2 ]
Meyer, Axel [2 ]
Kuratani, Shigeru [1 ]
机构
[1] RIKEN, Ctr Dev Biol, Lab Evolutionary Morphol, Kobe, Hyogo, Japan
[2] Univ Konstanz, Dept Biol, Lehrstuhl Zool & Evolutionsbiol, D-78457 Constance, Germany
关键词
HOX-CLUSTER; GENE DUPLICATIONS; EXPRESSION PATTERNS; PETROMYZON-MARINUS; JAWED VERTEBRATES; COLOR-VISION; EVOLUTION; LAMPREY; HAGFISH; PHYLOGENY;
D O I
10.1093/molbev/msn222
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Two rounds of whole-genome duplications are thought to have played an important role in the establishment of gene repertoires in vertebrates. These events occurred during chordate evolution after the split of the urochordate and cephalochordate lineages but before the radiation of extant gnathostomes (jawed vertebrates). During this interval, diverse agnathans (jawless fishes), including cyclostomes (hagfishes and lampreys), diverged. However, there is no solid evidence for the timing of these genome duplications in relation to the divergence of cyclostomes from the gnathostome lineage. We conducted cDNA sequencing in diverse early vertebrates for members of homeobox-containing (Dlx and ParaHox) and other gene families that would serve as landmarks for genome duplications. Including these new sequences, we performed a molecular phylogenetic census using the maximum likelihood method for 55 gene families. In most of these gene families, we detected many more gene duplications before the cyclostome-gnathostome split, than after. Many of these gene families (e.g., visual opsins, RAR, Notch) have multiple paralogs in conserved, syntenic genomic regions that must have been generated by large-scale duplication events. Taken together, this indicates that the genome duplications occurred before the cyclostome-gnathostome split. We propose that the redundancy in gene repertoires possessed by all vertebrates, including hagfishes and lampreys, was introduced primarily by genome duplications. Apart from subsequent lineage-specific modifications, these ancient genome duplication events might serve generally to distinguish vertebrates from invertebrates at the genomic level.
引用
收藏
页码:47 / 59
页数:13
相关论文
共 6 条
  • [1] Concomitant Duplications of Opioid Peptide and Receptor Genes before the Origin of Jawed Vertebrates
    Sundstrom, Gorel
    Dreborg, Susanne
    Larhammar, Dan
    PLOS ONE, 2010, 5 (05):
  • [2] ORIGIN AND EVOLUTION OF THE NEUROENDOCRINE CONTROL OF REPRODUCTION IN VERTEBRATES, WITH SPECIAL FOCUS ON GENOME AND GENE DUPLICATIONS
    Dufour, Sylvie
    Querat, Bruno
    Tostivint, Herve
    Pasqualini, Catherine
    Vaudry, Hubert
    Rousseau, Karine
    PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 2020, 100 (02) : 869 - 943
  • [3] Ancient Genomic Regulatory Blocks Are a Source for Regulatory Gene Deserts in Vertebrates after Whole-Genome Duplications
    Touceda-Suarez, Maria
    Kita, Elizabeth M.
    Acemel, Rafael D.
    Firbas, Panos N.
    Magri, Marta S.
    Naranjo, Silvia
    Tena, Juan J.
    Gomez-Skarmeta, Jose Luis
    Maeso, Ignacio
    Irimia, Manuel
    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2020, 37 (10) : 2857 - 2864
  • [4] Ancient multiplicity in cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) cation channel repertoire was reduced in the ancestor of Olfactores before reexpansion by whole genome duplications in vertebrates
    Lagman, David
    Haines, Helen J.
    Abalo, Xesus M.
    Larhammar, Dan
    PLOS ONE, 2022, 17 (12):
  • [5] Legume Cytosolic and Plastid Acetyl-Coenzyme-A Carboxylase Genes Differ by Evolutionary Patterns and Selection Pressure Schemes Acting before and after Whole-Genome Duplications
    Szczepaniak, Anna
    Ksiazkiewicz, Michal
    Podkowinski, Jan
    Czyz, Katarzyna B.
    Figlerowicz, Marek
    Naganowska, Barbara
    GENES, 2018, 9 (11):
  • [6] Expansion of Secretin-Like G Protein-Coupled Receptors and Their Peptide Ligands via Local Duplications Before and After Two Rounds of Whole-Genome Duplication
    Hwang, Jong-Ik
    Moon, Mi Jin
    Park, Sumi
    Kim, Dong-Kyu
    Cho, Eun Bee
    Ha, Nui
    Son, Gi Hoon
    Kim, Kyungjin
    Vaudry, Hubert
    Seong, Jae Young
    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2013, 30 (05) : 1119 - 1130