Affiliation:
1. Dalhousie University Department of Mathematics and Statistics, , Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada
2. Dalhousie University Faculty of Computer Science, , Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada
Abstract
Abstract
Organismal traits can evolve in a coordinated way, with correlated patterns of gains and losses reflecting important evolutionary associations. Discovering these associations can reveal important information about the functional and ecological linkages among traits. Phylogenetic profiles treat individual genes as traits distributed across sets of genomes and can provide a fine-grained view of the genetic underpinnings of evolutionary processes in a set of genomes. Phylogenetic profiling has been used to identify genes that are functionally linked and to identify common patterns of lateral gene transfer in microorganisms. However, comparative analysis of phylogenetic profiles and other trait distributions should take into account the phylogenetic relationships among the organisms under consideration. Here, we propose the Community Coevolution Model (CCM), a new coevolutionary model to analyze the evolutionary associations among traits, with a focus on phylogenetic profiles. In the CCM, traits are considered to evolve as a community with interactions, and the transition rate for each trait depends on the current states of other traits. Surpassing other comparative methods for pairwise trait analysis, CCM has the additional advantage of being able to examine multiple traits as a community to reveal more dependency relationships. We also develop a simulation procedure to generate phylogenetic profiles with correlated evolutionary patterns that can be used as benchmark data for evaluation purposes. A simulation study demonstrates that CCM is more accurate than other methods including the Jaccard Index and three tree-aware methods. The parameterization of CCM makes the interpretation of the relations between genes more direct, which leads to Darwin’s scenario being identified easily based on the estimated parameters. We show that CCM is more efficient and fits real data better than other methods resulting in higher likelihood scores with fewer parameters. An examination of 3786 phylogenetic profiles across a set of 659 bacterial genomes highlights linkages between genes with common functions, including many patterns that would not have been identified under a nonphylogenetic model of common distribution. We also applied the CCM to 44 proteins in the well-studied Mitochondrial Respiratory Complex I and recovered associations that mapped well onto the structural associations that exist in the complex. [Coevolution; evolutionary rates; gene network; graphical models; phylogenetic profiles; phylogeny.]
Funder
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Genome Canada
Research Nova Scotia
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
3 articles.
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