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Comparative genomics

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Genome browser: http://genome.cse.ucsc.edu/ Homologene: http://www.ncbi.nlm. ... Compare humans with macaque monkeys (primates), and rats with mice (rodents) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Comparative genomics


1
Comparative genomics
  • Why humans have big heads and language

2
Genome Projects etc
  • Genome browser http//genome.cse.ucsc.edu/
  • Homologene http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/que
    ry.fcgi?dbhomologene
  • Nature Chimp Genome http//www.nature.com/nature/
    focus/chimpgenome/index.html
  • Genomic biology
  • http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Genomes/

3
Evolutionary concepts
  • Homologues are structures (genes, proteins, body
    parts) with a common evolutionary origin
  • Homologous genes and proteins are identified by
    database searching (BLAST)
  • Example from HomoloGene database
    http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?dbh
    omologenecmdsearchtermfoxp2
  • Mutations can be synonymous (no change in
    aminoacid) or non-synonymous (changes aminoacid)
  • Ka/Ks is ratio of non-synonymous mutations per
    non-synonymous site, to synonymous mutations per
    synonymous site
  • Whats expected for Ka/Ks under different types
    of selection
  • 1 implies neutral (no selective effect)
  • lt 1 implies negative or purifying selection
  • gt 1 implies positive selection

4
Compare all codons along the alignment of 2 (or
more) genes count numbers of synonymous and
non-synonymous changes divide by number of
synonymous or non-synonymous sites
5
Rapidly-evolving genes
  • Dorus S et al, Cell (2004) 119 1027-1040
  • Do nervous system genes evolve faster in
    primates?
  • Compare humans with macaque monkeys (primates),
    and rats with mice (rodents)
  • Define groups of genes nervous system (brain
    expression, role in brain diseases) and
    housekeeping (basic biochemical functions in all
    tissue and cell types)

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7
Ka/Ks in primate lineages
8
Language disorder
  • Rare, autosomal dominant language disorder in the
    KE family developmental verbal dyspraxia
    (problems with control of orofacial movements),
    language processing and grammar

9
Review article Bishop DVM, Trends in Genetics
(2002) 18 57-59
Affected members of the KE family have a striking
and specific impairment in one aspect of grammar,
the ability to use grammatical features, such
as inflections for marking tense and agreement.
For instance, they have major problems with a
task where an artificial verb stem had to be
converted into a past tense (e.g. every day I
plam yesterday I(plammed). They have
difficulty judging that the boys played football
yesterday is grammatical whereas the boys play
football yesterday is not.
The phenotypic impairments extend well beyond
grammatical features. The affected members had
severe difficulties in producing or imitating
intelligible speech, and in producing
non-speech oral movements (although they had
no problems with limb movements), in addition to
measurable but less severe difficulties in tests
of picture naming, word recognition and
grammatical comprehension.
10
FOXP2 gene mutated in KE family
  • Positional cloning led to the FOXP2 gene (Lai CS
    et al, Nature (2001) 413 519-523)
  • Protein contains a forkhead/winged helix (FOX)
    domain, found also in a family of transcription
    factors
  • Expressed in regions of CNS during development

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12
FOXP2 evolution
  • Enard W et al, Nature (2002) 418 869-872
  • Zhang J et al, Genetics (2002) 162 1825-1835
  • Didnt use Ka/Ks, but looked at probabilities of
    observed mutations in human and other lineages

13
From Zhang et al
Acceleration index l takes into account
evolutionary timescale of human-chimp and
primate-rodent divergence
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15
From Enard et al
16
FOXP2 in Neanderthals
  • Neanderthals lived alongside our ancestors until
    30000 years ago common ancestor 300000 years
    ago
  • Krause et al sequenced Neanderthal DNA and found
    FOXP2 has same changes as modern humans
  • Selection for this version of gene began before
    our ancestors split from Neanderthals
  • Coop et al were sceptical and proposed other
    explanations

17
Microcephaly
  • Congenital defect causing severe reduction in
    head size and brain development, without other
    gross abnormalities
  • At least 6 autosomal recessive loci are known, of
    which 2 have causal genes identified
  • Evans PD et al, Human Molec. Genet. (2004) 13
    1139-1145 and 489-494

18
The smaller brain of a 13-year-old with
microcephaly (left) and the normal brain of an
11-year-old (right). From www.sciencenews.org
19
ASPM
  • Abnormal spindle-like microcephaly associated
  • Expressed mainly in regions of brain neurogenesis
    such as cerebral cortex, also in many other
    tissues
  • Drosophila homologue is a microtubule-binding
    protein required for mitotic spindle organisation
    in neurodevelopment
  • Human version is also associated with spindles in
    mitosis

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Another test for positive selection
  • Compare non-synonymous/synonymous ratio within
    species to ns/s ratio between species
    (McDonald-Kreitman test)
  • If ratio between species is gtgt than within
    species, suggests positive selection is acting
  • To investigate, sequenced ASPM from 40 people
    from across the world compared differences
    within human species to those between humans and
    other species

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23
Microcephalin
  • 14 exons, 2.5kb of coding sequence, 3 BRCT
    domains (as found in BRCA1 and implicated in
    protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions)
  • Function unknown
  • Expressed in many tissues, especially in areas of
    active neurogenesis

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25
Ka/Ks varies along the microcephalin gene
26
Microcephalin still evolving
  • Evans, Gilbert, et al 2005
  • Haplogroup of the gene defined by G to C mutation
    in exon 8, changing Asp to His
  • Arose 37000 years ago, has spread too quickly
    than would be explained by genetic drift
  • Suggests its under positive selection
  • Nature of selection unknown

27
Global distribution of microcephalin D-haplogroup
28
but not because it makes you any smarter!
  • Mekel-Bobrov et al (2007) studied microcephalin
    and ASPM adaptive alleles in relation to measures
    of IQ in gt2000 subjects
  • Found no overall association
  • Found association in Dutch children with
    microcephalin D-haplogroup, but it was the other
    way round in Dutch adults, and not replicated in
    other samples

29
General conclusions
  • Having genome sequences of many organisms allows
    large-scale comparisons, potentially automated
  • Can test hypotheses about genes whose rapid
    evolution may be related to special features of a
    particular species
  • In humans, this includes several genes with roles
    in brain development
  • The most uniquely human feature of all, language,
    also seems to depend on rapidly-evolving genes
  • May be lots more information in non-coding
    regions of genes e.g. promoters
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