T

T Gojobori

Publishes on Genomics and Phylogenetic Studies, RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms, RNA modifications and cancer. 2 papers and 5.1k citations.

2Publications
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Simple methods for estimating the numbers of synonymous and nonsynonymous nucleotide substitutions.
M Nei, T Gojobori|Molecular Biology and Evolution|1986
Cited by 5kOpen Access

Two simple methods for estimating the numbers of synonymous and nonsynonymous nucleotide substitutions are presented. Although they give no weights to different types of codon substitutions, these methods give essentially the same results as those obtained by Miyata and Yasunaga's and by Li et al.'s methods. Computer simulation indicates that estimates of synonymous substitutions obtained by the two methods are quite accurate unless the number of nucleotide substitutions per site is very large. It is shown that all available methods tend to give an underestimate of the number of nonsynonymous substitutions when the number is large.

Concerted evolution of the immunoglobulin VH gene family.
T Gojobori, M Nei|Molecular Biology and Evolution|1984
Cited by 50

With the aim of understanding the concerted evolution of the immunoglobulin VH multigene family, a phylogenetic tree for the DNA sequences of 16 mouse and five human germ line genes was constructed. This tree indicates that all genes in this family have undergone substantial evolutionary divergence. The most closely related genes so far identified in the mouse genome seem to have diverged about 6 million years (MY) ago, whereas the most distantly related genes diverged about 300 MY ago. This suggests that gene duplication caused by unequal crossing-over or gene conversion occurs very slowly in this gene family. The rate of occurrence of gene duplication in the VH gene family has been estimated to be 5 x 10(-7) per gene per year, which seems to be at least about 100 times lower than that for the rRNA gene family. This low rate of concerted evolution in the VH gene family helps retain intergenic genetic variability that in turn contributes to antibody diversity. Because of accumulation of destructive mutations, however, about one-third of the mouse and human VH genes seem to have become nonfunctional. Many of these pseudogenes have apparently originated recently, but some of them seem to have existed in the genome for more than 10 MY. The rate of nucleotide substitution for the complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) is as high as that of pseudogenes. This suggests that there is virtually no purifying selection operating in the CDRs and that germ line mutations are effectively used for generating antibody diversity.