Gene Families: The Taxonomy of Protein Paralogs and Chimeras

Author:

Henikoff Steven1,Greene Elizabeth A.1,Pietrokovski Shmuel1,Bork Peer1,Attwood Teresa K.1,Hood Leroy1

Affiliation:

1. S. Henikoff is at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Seattle, WA 98109–1024, USA. E. A. Greene and S. Pietrokovski are at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA 98109–1024, USA. P. Bork is at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory, 69012 Heidelberg, Germany, and Max-Delbrueck-Center for Molecular Medicine, 13122 Berlin-Buch, Germany. T. K. Attwood is in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University College London,...

Abstract

Ancient duplications and rearrangements of protein-coding segments have resulted in complex gene family relationships. Duplications can be tandem or dispersed and can involve entire coding regions or modules that correspond to folded protein domains. As a result, gene products may acquire new specificities, altered recognition properties, or modified functions. Extreme proliferation of some families within an organism, perhaps at the expense of other families, may correspond to functional innovations during evolution. The underlying processes are still at work, and the large fraction of human and other genomes consisting of transposable elements may be a manifestation of the evolutionary benefits of genomic flexibility.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference76 articles.

1. Distinguishing Homologous from Analogous Proteins

2. . Orthologs can only be determined definitively with a complete inventory of the genes in an organism. See

3. A Genomic Perspective on Protein Families

4. We use the term “family” generically to describe any collection of genes or proteins that are presumed to share common ancestry.

5. V. M. Ingram Hemoglobins in Genetics and Evolution (Columbia Univ. Press New York 1963).

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