TY - JOUR
T1 - Expansion of gene clusters, circular orders, and the shortest Hamiltonian path problem
AU - The Students of the Graphs and Biological Networks Lab 2017
AU - Prohaska, Sonja J.
AU - Berkemer, Sarah J.
AU - Gärtner, Fabian
AU - Gatter, Thomas
AU - Retzlaff, Nancy
AU - Höner zu Siederdissen, Christian
AU - Stadler, Peter F.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017, The Author(s).
PY - 2018/8/1
Y1 - 2018/8/1
N2 - Clusters of paralogous genes such as the famous HOX cluster of developmental transcription factors tend to evolve by stepwise duplication of its members, often involving unequal crossing over. Gene conversion and possibly other mechanisms of concerted evolution further obfuscate the phylogenetic relationships. As a consequence, it is very difficult or even impossible to disentangle the detailed history of gene duplications in gene clusters. In this contribution we show that the expansion of gene clusters by unequal crossing over as proposed by Walter Gehring leads to distinctive patterns of genetic distances, namely a subclass of circular split systems. Furthermore, when the gene cluster was left undisturbed by genome rearrangements, the shortest Hamiltonian paths with respect to genetic distances coincide with the genomic order. This observation can be used to detect ancient genomic rearrangements of gene clusters and to distinguish gene clusters whose evolution was dominated by unequal crossing over within genes from those that expanded through other mechanisms.
AB - Clusters of paralogous genes such as the famous HOX cluster of developmental transcription factors tend to evolve by stepwise duplication of its members, often involving unequal crossing over. Gene conversion and possibly other mechanisms of concerted evolution further obfuscate the phylogenetic relationships. As a consequence, it is very difficult or even impossible to disentangle the detailed history of gene duplications in gene clusters. In this contribution we show that the expansion of gene clusters by unequal crossing over as proposed by Walter Gehring leads to distinctive patterns of genetic distances, namely a subclass of circular split systems. Furthermore, when the gene cluster was left undisturbed by genome rearrangements, the shortest Hamiltonian paths with respect to genetic distances coincide with the genomic order. This observation can be used to detect ancient genomic rearrangements of gene clusters and to distinguish gene clusters whose evolution was dominated by unequal crossing over within genes from those that expanded through other mechanisms.
KW - Evolution of gene clusters
KW - Hamiltonian path problems
KW - Kalmanson metrics
KW - Non-homologous recombination
KW - Phylogenetic combinatorics
KW - Unequal crossing over
U2 - 10.1007/s00285-017-1197-3
DO - 10.1007/s00285-017-1197-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 29260295
AN - SCOPUS:85038404069
SN - 0303-6812
VL - 77
SP - 313
EP - 341
JO - Journal of Mathematical Biology
JF - Journal of Mathematical Biology
IS - 2
ER -