4.8 Article

Phylogenetic profiles reveal evolutionary relationships within the twilight zone of sequence similarity

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0803860105

Keywords

ab initio; retroelements; reverse transcriptase; GDDA-BLAST

Funding

  1. Searle Young Investigators Award
  2. Pennsylvania State University
  3. NCSA [TG-MCB070027N]
  4. Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center [B10060003P]
  5. Pennsylvania Department of Health
  6. The Pennsylvania Department of Health

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Inferring evolutionary relationships among highly divergent protein sequences is a daunting task. In particular, when pairwise sequence alignments between protein sequences fall <25% identity, the phylogenetic relationships among sequences cannot be estimated with statistical certainty. Here, we show that phylogenetic profiles generated with the Gestalt Domain Detection Algorithm-Basic Local Alignment Tool (GDDA-BLAST) are capable of deriving, ab initio, phylogenetic relationships for highly divergent proteins in a quantifiable and robust manner. Notably, the results from our computational case study of the highly divergent family of retroelements accord with previous estimates of their evolutionary relationships. Taken together, these data demonstrate that GDDA-BLAST provides an independent and powerful measure of evolutionary relationships that does not rely on potentially subjective sequence alignment. We demonstrate that evolutionary relationships can be measured with phylogenetic profiles, and therefore propose that these measurements can provide key insights into relationships among distantly related and/or rapidly evolving proteins.

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