Evidence of functional selection pressure for alternative splicing events that accelerate evolution of protein subsequences

被引:114
作者
Xing, Y [1 ]
Lee, C [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Inst Mol Biol, Ctr Genom & Prote, Dept Chem & Biochem, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
关键词
bioinformatics; exon; comparative genomics; Ka/Ks; RNA splicing;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.0501213102
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Recently, it was proposed that alternative splicing may act as a mechanism for opening accelerated paths of evolution, by reducing negative selection pressure, but there has been little evidence so far that this mechanism could produce adaptive benefit. Here, we use metrics of very different types of selection pressures [e.g., against amino acid mutations (Ka/Ks), against mutations at synonymous sites (Ks), and for protein reading-frame preservation] to address this question by genomewide analyses of human, chimpanzee, mouse, and rat. These data show that alternative splicing relaxes Ka/Ks selection pressure up to 7-fold, but intriguingly this effect is accompanied by a strong increase in selection pressure against synonymous mutations, which propagates into the adjacent intron, and correlates strongly with the alternative splicing level observed for each exon. These effects are highly local to the alternatively spliced exon. Comparisons of these four genomes consistently show an increase in the density of amino acid mutations (Ka) in alternatively spliced exons and a decrease in the density of synonymous mutations (Ks). This selection pressure against synonymous mutations in alternatively spliced exons was accompanied in all four genomes by a striking increase in selection pressure for protein reading-frame preservation, and both increased markedly with increasing evolutionary age. Restricting our analysis to a subset of exons with strong evidence for biologically functional alternative splicing produced identical results. Thus alternative splicing apparently can create evolutionary "hotspots" within a protein sequence, and these events have evidently been selected for during mammalian evolution.
引用
收藏
页码:13526 / 13531
页数:6
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