Danchin Etienne G J, Gouret Philippe, Pontarotti Pierre
Phylogenomics Laboratory, EA 3781 EGEE, Universite de Provence, Marseilles, France.
BMC Evol Biol. 2006 Jan 18;6:5. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-6-5.
Gene losses played a role which may have been as important as gene and genome duplications and rearrangements, in modelling today species' genomes from a common ancestral set of genes. The set and diversity of protein-coding genes in a species has direct output at the functional level. While gene losses have been reported in all the major lineages of the metazoan tree of life, none have proposed a focus on specific losses in the vertebrates and mammals lineages. In contrast, genes lost in protostomes (i.e. arthropods and nematodes) but still present in vertebrates have been reported and extensively detailed. This probable over-anthropocentric way of comparing genomes does not consider as an important phenomena, gene losses in species that are usually described as "higher". However reporting universally conserved genes throughout evolution that have recently been lost in vertebrates and mammals could reveal interesting features about the evolution of our genome, particularly if these losses can be related to losses of capability.
We report 11 gene families conserved throughout eukaryotes from yeasts (such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae) to bilaterian animals (such as Drosophila melanogaster or Caenorhabditis elegans). This evolutionarily wide conservation suggests they were present in the last common ancestors of fungi and metazoan animals. None of these 11 gene families are found in human nor mouse genomes, and their absence generally extends to all vertebrates. A total of 8 out of these 11 gene families have orthologs in plants, suggesting they were present in the Last Eukaryotic Common Ancestor (LECA). We investigated known functional information for these 11 gene families. This allowed us to correlate some of the lost gene families to loss of capabilities.
Mammalian and vertebrate genomes lost evolutionary conserved ancestral genes that are probably otherwise not dispensable in eukaryotes. Hence, the human genome, which is generally viewed as being the result of increased complexity and gene-content, has also evolved through simplification and gene losses. This acknowledgement confirms, as already suggested, that the genome of our far ancestor was probably more complex than ever considered.
在从共同的祖先基因集合塑造当今物种的基因组过程中,基因丢失所起的作用可能与基因和基因组的复制及重排同样重要。一个物种中蛋白质编码基因的集合和多样性在功能层面有直接体现。虽然在后生动物生命之树的所有主要谱系中都有基因丢失的报道,但尚未有人提出关注脊椎动物和哺乳动物谱系中的特定丢失情况。相比之下,原口动物(即节肢动物和线虫)中丢失但在脊椎动物中仍存在的基因已有报道并被广泛详述。这种可能过于以人类为中心的比较基因组的方式没有将通常被描述为“高等”物种中的基因丢失视为重要现象。然而,报道在整个进化过程中普遍保守但最近在脊椎动物和哺乳动物中丢失的基因,可能会揭示有关我们基因组进化的有趣特征,特别是如果这些丢失与能力丧失有关的话。
我们报道了11个在从酵母(如酿酒酵母)到两侧对称动物(如黑腹果蝇或秀丽隐杆线虫)的整个真核生物中保守的基因家族。这种在进化上广泛的保守性表明它们存在于真菌和后生动物的最后共同祖先中。在人类和小鼠基因组中均未发现这11个基因家族中的任何一个,并且它们的缺失通常扩展到所有脊椎动物。这11个基因家族中共有8个在植物中有直系同源基因,表明它们存在于最后的真核生物共同祖先(LECA)中。我们研究了这11个基因家族的已知功能信息。这使我们能够将一些丢失的基因家族与能力丧失相关联。
哺乳动物和脊椎动物基因组丢失了在进化上保守的祖先基因,而这些基因在真核生物中可能并非可有可无。因此,通常被视为复杂性和基因含量增加结果的人类基因组,也通过简化和基因丢失而进化。这一认识证实了,正如已经有人提出的那样,我们远古祖先的基因组可能比以往认为的更加复杂。