Compensatory relationship between low-complexity regions and gene paralogy in the evolution of prokaryotes

Author:

Persi Erez1,Wolf Yuri I.1ORCID,Karamycheva Svetlana1,Makarova Kira S.1ORCID,Koonin Eugene V.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Library of Medicine, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20894

Abstract

The evolution of genomes in all life forms involves two distinct, dynamic types of genomic changes: gene duplication (and loss) that shape families of paralogous genes and extension (and contraction) of low-complexity regions (LCR), which occurs through dynamics of short repeats in protein-coding genes. Although the roles of each of these types of events in genome evolution have been studied, their co-evolutionary dynamics is not thoroughly understood. Here, by analyzing a wide range of genomes from diverse bacteria and archaea, we show that LCR and paralogy represent two distinct routes of evolution that are inversely correlated. The emergence of LCR is a prominent evolutionary mechanism in fast evolving, young protein families, whereas paralogy dominates the comparatively slow evolution of old protein families. The analysis of multiple prokaryotic genomes shows that the formation of LCR is likely a widespread, transient evolutionary mechanism that temporally and locally affects also ancestral functions, but apparently, fades away with time, under mutational and selective pressures, yielding to gene paralogy. We propose that compensatory relationships between short-term and longer-term evolutionary mechanisms are universal in the evolution of life.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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