| Research Area: | Molecular Evolution | Year: | 2011 | ||||
| Type of Publication: | Article | ||||||
| Authors: |
|
||||||
| Journal: | Journal of Molecular Evolution | Volume: | Accepted, April 2011 | ||||
| Abstract: | |||||||
Protein products of highly expressed genes tend to favor amino acids that have lower average biosynthetic
costs (i.e., they exhibit metabolic efficiency). While this trend has been observed in several studies, the specific
sites where cost-reducing substitutions accumulate have not been well characterized. Toward that end,
weighted costs in conserved and variable positions were evaluated across a total of 9,119 homologous proteins
in four mammalian orders (primate, carnivore, rodent, and artiodactyls), which together contain a total of
20,457,072 amino acids. Degree of conservation at homologous positions in these mammalian proteins and
average-weighted cost across all positions within a single protein are significantly correlated. Dividing human
genes into two classes (those with and those without CpG islands in their promoters) suggests that humans
also preferentially utilize less costly amino acids in highly expressed genes. In contrast to the intuitive
expectation that the relatively weak selective force associated with metabolic efficiency would be a selection
pressure in complex multicellular organisms, the overall level of selective constraint within the variable regions of mammalian proteins allows the metabolic efficiency to derive a reduction of overall biosynthetic
cost, particularly in genes with the highest levels of expression. |
|||||||