Force A, Lynch M, Pickett F B, Amores A, Yan Y L, Postlethwait J
Department of Biology, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403, USA.
Genetics. 1999 Apr;151(4):1531-45. doi: 10.1093/genetics/151.4.1531.
The origin of organismal complexity is generally thought to be tightly coupled to the evolution of new gene functions arising subsequent to gene duplication. Under the classical model for the evolution of duplicate genes, one member of the duplicated pair usually degenerates within a few million years by accumulating deleterious mutations, while the other duplicate retains the original function. This model further predicts that on rare occasions, one duplicate may acquire a new adaptive function, resulting in the preservation of both members of the pair, one with the new function and the other retaining the old. However, empirical data suggest that a much greater proportion of gene duplicates is preserved than predicted by the classical model. Here we present a new conceptual framework for understanding the evolution of duplicate genes that may help explain this conundrum. Focusing on the regulatory complexity of eukaryotic genes, we show how complementary degenerative mutations in different regulatory elements of duplicated genes can facilitate the preservation of both duplicates, thereby increasing long-term opportunities for the evolution of new gene functions. The duplication-degeneration-complementation (DDC) model predicts that (1) degenerative mutations in regulatory elements can increase rather than reduce the probability of duplicate gene preservation and (2) the usual mechanism of duplicate gene preservation is the partitioning of ancestral functions rather than the evolution of new functions. We present several examples (including analysis of a new engrailed gene in zebrafish) that appear to be consistent with the DDC model, and we suggest several analytical and experimental approaches for determining whether the complementary loss of gene subfunctions or the acquisition of novel functions are likely to be the primary mechanisms for the preservation of gene duplicates. For a newly duplicated paralog, survival depends on the outcome of the race between entropic decay and chance acquisition of an advantageous regulatory mutation. Sidow 1996(p. 717) On one hand, it may fix an advantageous allele giving it a slightly different, and selectable, function from its original copy. This initial fixation provides substantial protection against future fixation of null mutations, allowing additional mutations to accumulate that refine functional differentiation. Alternatively, a duplicate locus can instead first fix a null allele, becoming a pseudogene. Walsh 1995 (p. 426) Duplicated genes persist only if mutations create new and essential protein functions, an event that is predicted to occur rarely. Nadeau and Sankoff 1997 (p. 1259) Thus overall, with complex metazoans, the major mechanism for retention of ancient gene duplicates would appear to have been the acquisition of novel expression sites for developmental genes, with its accompanying opportunity for new gene roles underlying the progressive extension of development itself. Cooke et al. 1997 (p. 362)
生物复杂性的起源通常被认为与基因复制后产生的新基因功能的进化紧密相关。在经典的基因复制进化模型中,复制基因对中的一个成员通常会在几百万年内通过积累有害突变而退化,而另一个复制基因则保留原始功能。该模型进一步预测,在极少数情况下,一个复制基因可能会获得新的适应性功能,从而导致该基因对的两个成员都得以保留,一个具有新功能,另一个保留旧功能。然而,实证数据表明,保留下来的基因复制体比例比经典模型预测的要高得多。在此,我们提出一个新的概念框架来理解复制基因的进化,这可能有助于解释这一难题。聚焦于真核基因的调控复杂性,我们展示了复制基因不同调控元件中的互补性退化突变如何促进两个复制基因的保留,从而增加新基因功能进化的长期机会。复制 - 退化 - 互补(DDC)模型预测:(1)调控元件中的退化突变会增加而非降低复制基因保留的概率;(2)复制基因保留的通常机制是祖先功能的划分,而非新功能的进化。我们给出了几个似乎与DDC模型一致的例子(包括对斑马鱼中一个新的engrailed基因的分析),并且我们提出了几种分析和实验方法,以确定基因亚功能的互补性丧失或新功能的获得是否可能是保留复制基因的主要机制。对于一个新复制的旁系同源基因来说,其存活取决于熵衰变与偶然获得有利调控突变之间的竞争结果。西多夫1996(第717页)一方面,它可能固定一个有利等位基因,使其具有与原始拷贝略有不同且可选择的功能。这种初始固定为防止未来无效突变的固定提供了实质性保护,允许积累额外的突变以完善功能分化。或者,一个复制位点可能首先固定一个无效等位基因,从而成为一个假基因。沃尔什1995(第426页)只有当突变产生新的和必需的蛋白质功能时,复制基因才会持续存在,而这种情况预计很少发生。纳多和桑科夫1997(第1259页)因此总体而言,对于复杂的后生动物来说,保留古老基因复制体的主要机制似乎是发育基因获得新的表达位点,以及随之而来的新基因角色的机会,这是发育自身逐步扩展的基础。库克等人1997(第362页)