The evolution of gene duplicates in angiosperms and the impact of protein-protein interactions and the mechanism of duplication

Author:

Defoort Jonas123,Van de Peer Yves1234,Carretero-Paulet Lorenzo123

Affiliation:

1. Ghent University, Department of Plant Biotechnology and Bioinformatics, Ghent, Belgium

2. VIB Center for Plant Systems Biology, Ghent, Belgium

3. Bioinformatics Institute Ghent, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium

4. Department of Biochemistry, Genetics and Microbiology, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa

Abstract

Abstract Gene duplicates, generated either through whole genome duplication (WGD) or small-scale duplication (SSD), are prominent in angiosperms and are believed to play an important role in adaptation and in generating evolutionary novelty. Previous studies reported contrasting evolutionary and functional dynamics of duplicate genes depending on the mechanism of origin, a behaviour that is hypothesized to stem from constraints to maintain the relative dosage balance between the genes concerned and their interaction context. However, the mechanisms ultimately influencing loss and retention of gene duplicates over evolutionary time are not yet fully elucidated. Here, by using a robust classification of gene duplicates in Arabidopsis thaliana, Solanum lycopersicum and Zea mays, large RNAseq expression compendia and an extensive protein-protein interaction (PPI) network from Arabidopsis, we investigated the impact of PPIs on the differential evolutionary and functional fate of WGD and SSD duplicates. In all three species, retained WGD duplicates show stronger constraints to diverge at the sequence and expression level than SSD ones, a pattern that is also observed for shared PPI partners between Arabidopsis duplicates. PPIs are preferentially distributed among WGD duplicates and specific functional categories. Furthermore, duplicates with PPIs tend to be under stronger constraints to evolve than their counterparts without PPIs regardless of their mechanism of origin. Our results support dosage balance constraint as a specific property of genes involved in biological interactions, including physical PPIs, and suggest that additional factors may be differently influencing the evolution of genes following duplication, depending on the species, time and mechanism of origin.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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