Search results for "Neutral theory of molecular evolution"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Essentiality Is a Strong Determinant of Protein Rates of Evolution during Mutation Accumulation Experiments in Escherichia coli

2016

[EN] The Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution is considered the most powerful theory to understand the evolutionary behavior of proteins. One of the main predictions of this theory is that essential proteins should evolve slower than dispensable ones owing to increased selective constraints. Comparison of genomes of different species, however, has revealed only small differences between the rates of evolution ofessential and nonessential proteins. In some analyses, these differences vanish once confounding factors are controlled for, whereas in other cases essentiality seems to have an independent, albeit small, effect. It has been argued that comparing relatively distant genomes may entai…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineBiologymedicine.disease_cause010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenomeProtein evolutionEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesGeneticsmedicineEscherichia colidN/dSProtein lengthEscherichia coliGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics2. Zero hungerGeneticsExperimental evolutionGenes EssentialModels GeneticEscherichia coli ProteinsGene Expression Regulation BacterialRates of evolutionMutation AccumulationNeutral theoryEssentiality030104 developmental biologyExperimental evolutionMutationNeutral theory of molecular evolutionGenome BacterialResearch Article
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Evolutionary impact of copy number variation rates.

2017

[Objective]: Copy number variation is now recognized as one of the major sources of genetic variation among individuals in natural populations of any species. However, the relevance of these unexpected observations goes beyond diagnosing high diversity. [Results]: Here, it is argued that the molecular rates of copy number variation, mainly the deletion rate upon variation, determine the evolutionary road of the genome regarding size. Genetic drift will govern this process only if the efective population size is lower than the inverse of the deletion rate. Otherwise, natural selection will do.

0301 basic medicineGenome sizeDNA Copy Number VariationsGene duplicationPopulation geneticsPopulation geneticslcsh:MedicineBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciencesEffective population sizeGenetic driftGenetic variationAnimalsHumansCopy-number variationlcsh:Science (General)Genome sizelcsh:QH301-705.5GeneticsNatural selectionlcsh:RGenetic DriftBirth–death processGeneral MedicineBiological EvolutionResearch Note030104 developmental biologyGenetics Populationlcsh:Biology (General)Evolutionary biologyNeutral theory of molecular evolutionNeutral evolutionlcsh:Q1-390BMC research notes
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Variation of haplotype distributions of two genomic regions of Citrus tristeza virus populations from eastern Spain.

2003

Genetic variation in natural populations of Citrus tristeza virus (CTV) was studied using haplotypes detected by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis of two genomic regions (p20 gene and segment A, located in ORF1a). Analysis of 254 samples from 125 trees, collected at 12 different sites, yielded 8 different haplotypes for p20 and 5 for segment A. The most frequent haplotype of p20 was predominant at all sites, but several sites differed in the predominance of segment A haplotypes. At most sites, the homozygosity observed for the p20 gene tended to be higher than expected in a neutral evolution, whereas the opposite was true for segment A. Comparison of the populations at…

CitrusClosterovirusPopulationGenome ViralBiologyAnalysis of molecular varianceGenetic variationotorhinolaryngologic diseasesGeneticseducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPolymorphism Single-Stranded ConformationalPlant DiseasesGeneticseducation.field_of_studyAnalysis of VarianceHaplotypeHomozygoteCitrus tristeza virusGenetic VariationSingle-strand conformation polymorphismbiology.organism_classificationGenetics PopulationHaplotypesSpainRootstockNeutral theory of molecular evolutionMolecular ecology
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Accelerated Evolution of Fetuin-A (FETUA, also AHSG) is Driven by Positive Darwinian Selection, not GC-Biased Gene Conversion

2009

article i nfo Human Fetuin-A (FETUA, also termed AHSG) is a serum protein composed of two cystatin-like domains D1 and D2 of together 235 amino acids (aa) and an unrelated domain D3 of 114 aa. Though the protein plays a role in diverse physiological and pathological processes, comparably little is known about sequence evolution of FETUA. We therefore analyzed its molecular evolution on the basis of coding sequences of 16 primate species. Ratios of non-synonymous to synonymous substitution rates (dn/ds= ω) suggest that a previously reported acceleration of sequence evolution of exon 7, which encodes domain D3, is driven by positive selection instead of neutral evolution. Irrespective of the …

GeneticsBase Sequencealpha-2-HS-GlycoproteinNull modelGene ConversionLocus (genetics)Blood ProteinsGeneral MedicineBiologyCleavage (embryo)Protein Structure TertiaryEvolution MolecularExonMolecular evolutionGeneticsAnimalsHumansGene conversionSelection GeneticCodonSynonymous substitutionNeutral theory of molecular evolutionGene
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Prediction of harmful variants on mitochondrial genes : Test of habitat-dependent and demographic effects in a euryhaline fish

2017

Both effective population size and life history may influence the efficacy of purifying selection, but it remains unclear if the environment affects the accumulation of weakly deleterious nonsynonymous polymorphisms. We hypothesize that the reduced energetic cost of osmoregulation in brackish water habitat may cause relaxation of selective constraints at mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) genes. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed 57 complete mitochondrial genomes of Pungitius pungitius collected from brackish and freshwater habitats. Based on inter- and intraspecific comparisons, we estimated that 84% and 68% of the nonsynonymous polymorphisms in the freshwater and brackish …

mtDNAnearly neutral theory of molecular evolutionHypothesesgenetic loadselective constraintadaptation
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