The protein domains of vertebrate species in which selection is more effective have greater intrinsic structural disorder

Author:

Weibel Catherine A12ORCID,Wheeler Andrew L3ORCID,James Jennifer E4ORCID,Willis Sara M4ORCID,McShea Hanon5ORCID,Masel Joanna4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mathematics, University of Arizona

2. Department of Physics, University of Arizona

3. Genetics Graduate Interdisciplinary Program, University of Arizona

4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona

5. Department of Earth System Science, Stanford University

Abstract

The nearly neutral theory of molecular evolution posits variation among species in the effectiveness of selection. In an idealized model, the census population size determines both this minimum magnitude of the selection coefficient required for deleterious variants to be reliably purged, and the amount of neutral diversity. Empirically, an ‘effective population size’ is often estimated from the amount of putatively neutral genetic diversity and is assumed to also capture a species’ effectiveness of selection. A potentially more direct measure of the effectiveness of selection is the degree to which selection maintains preferred codons. However, past metrics that compare codon bias across species are confounded by among-species variation in %GC content and/or amino acid composition. Here, we propose a new Codon Adaptation Index of Species (CAIS), based on Kullback–Leibler divergence, that corrects for both confounders. We demonstrate the use of CAIS correlations, as well as the Effective Number of Codons, to show that the protein domains of more highly adapted vertebrate species evolve higher intrinsic structural disorder.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

John Templeton Foundation

Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation

National Science Foundation

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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