4.8 Article

A Population-Genetic Lens into the Process of Gene Loss Following Whole-Genome Duplication

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 39, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msac118

Keywords

distribution of fitness effects; loss-of-function mutations; nonfunctionalization; Paramecium; whole-genome duplications

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [MCB-1518060, DEB-1927159]

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This study investigates the selective forces and ongoing loss of gene duplicates created by whole-genome duplications (WGDs) in multiple species of Paramecium. The results show that one of the WGD paralogs undergoes relaxation of purifying selection, leading to degeneration in functional efficiency and expression. Additionally, highly expressed duplicate genes experience more deleterious effects from new mutations compared to their lower-expressed paralogs.
Whole-genome duplications (WGDs) have occurred in many eukaryotic lineages. However, the underlying evolutionary forces and molecular mechanisms responsible for the long-term retention of gene duplicates created by WGDs are not well understood. We employ a population-genomic approach to understand the selective forces acting on paralogs and investigate ongoing duplicate-gene loss in multiple species of Paramecium that share an ancient WGD. We show that mutations that abolish protein function are more likely to be segregating in retained WGD paralogs than in single-copy genes, most likely because of ongoing nonfunctionalization post-WGD. This relaxation of purifying selection occurs in only one WGD paralog, accompanied by the gradual fixation of nonsynonymous mutations and reduction in levels of expression, and occurs over a long period of evolutionary time, marking one locus for future loss. Concordantly, the fitness effects of new nonsynonymous mutations and frameshift-causing indels are significantly more deleterious in the highly expressed copy compared with their paralogs with lower expression. Our results provide a novel mechanistic model of gene duplicate loss following WGDs, wherein selection acts on the sum of functional activity of both duplicate genes, allowing the two to wander in expression and functional space, until one duplicate locus eventually degenerates enough in functional efficiency or expression that its contribution to total activity is too insignificant to be retained by purifying selection. Retention of duplicates by such mechanisms predicts long times to duplicate-gene loss, which should not be falsely attributed to retention due to gain/change in function.

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