Origin and evolution of new exons in rodents

Wen Wang(Kunming Institute of Zoology), Hongkun Zheng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shuang Yang(Chinese Academy of Social Sciences), Haijing Yu(Yunnan University), Jun Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Huifeng Jiang(Chinese Academy of Social Sciences), Jianning Su(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lei Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jianguo Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jason McDermott(University of Washington), Ram Samudrala(University of Washington), Jian Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Huanming Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jun Yu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Karsten Kristiansen(University of Southern Denmark), Gane Ka‐Shu Wong, Jun Wang(University of Southern Denmark)
Genome Research
August 18, 2005
Cited by 105Open Access
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Abstract

Gene number difference among organisms demonstrates that new gene origination is a fundamental biological process in evolution. Exon shuffling has been universally observed in the formation of new genes. Yet to be learned are the ways new exons originate and evolve, and how often new exons appear. To address these questions, we identified 2695 newly evolved exons in the mouse and rat by comparing the expressed sequences of 12,419 orthologous genes between human and mouse, using 743,856 pig ESTs as the outgroup. The new exon origination rate is about 2.71 x 10(-3) per gene per million years. These new exons have markedly accelerated rates both of nonsynonymous substitutions and of insertions/deletions (indels). A much higher proportion of new exons have K(a)/K(s) ratios >1 (where K(a) is the nonsynonymous substitution rate and K(s) is the synonymous substitution rate) than do the old exons shared by human and mouse, implying a role of positive selection in the rapid evolution. The majority of these new exons have sequences unique in the genome, suggesting that most new exons might originate through "exonization" of intronic sequences. Most of the new exons appear to be alternative exons that are expressed at low levels.


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