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Causes of Variation in Substitution Rates Rate of Substitution is determined by: (1) Mutation rate Among genes Among gene regions (2) Probability of fixation Neutral, advantageous, deleterious Functional constraint: Range of alternative nucleotides that is acceptable at a site without negatively affecting the function or structure of a protein. Fraction of Selectively Neutral Mutations Total Mutation Rate per Unit Time Rate of Neutral Mutation mo = vT fo Neutral Theory Predicts k = mo : Rate of substitution So, k = vT fo k = vT fo So, rate of substitution will be greatest when fo is 1.0 i.e. Highest Rate of Substitution is Expected in Sequence That Does Not Have A Function Pseudogenes! Expect an inverse relationship between the intensity of the functional constraint and the rate of neutral evolution Also expect pattern of substitution to vary within genes 5’ UTR 5’ 3’ UTR Intron 2 Intron 1 Exon 1 Exon 2 GT Signal Initiation Sequences codon AG Ex 3 GT AG Stop codon Schematic of Eukaryotic Protein-Coding Locus 3’ Given this relationship: Also, expect higher rates of substitution for synonymous vs nonsynonymous sites. Logic: (1) Mutations that result in amino acid replacements have a higher probability of causing a deleterious effect on the structure/function of the protein. (2) Accordingly, the majority of nonsynonomous mutations will be eliminated from the population by purifying selection. (3) As a result, there will be a reduction in the rate of nonsynonymous substitution vs synonymous substitution. How do we explain variation in rates of nonsynonymous substitution among genes? What are the Patterns Of Nucleotide Substitution Within Coding and Non-coding Gene Regions? Mouse vs Human Time of divergence ~ 80,000 mya rate = substitutions / site / 109 years (1) Rates of substitution are extremely variable, more so for nonsynonymous substitutions. # Codons NSyn Rate Syn Rate (2) In the majority of genes, the synonymous substitution rate greatly exceeds the nonsynonymous rate. # Codons NSyn Rate Syn Rate (3) Overall rate of substitution is lowest for nondegenerate sites, highest for 4-fold degenerate sites. Table 7.2 Positive Selection KA/NA > # nonsyn. substitutions nonsyn. site > KS/NS # syn. substitutions syn. site Examples •Immunity (immunoglobulins, major histocompatibility) •Self / non-self recognition •Sex-related genes Map of the Human Leukocyte (HLA) Loci on Chrom. 6 Class I Class II Gene DPB1 DPA1 21 4 DQB1 DQA1 17 12 DRB1 DRB3 DRA 47 4 1 B C A 50 14 32 Number of alleles •HLA loci encode glycoproteins that present pieces of bacteria and viral protein on the surface of cells for possible recognition by the immune system Structure of MHC Class I Molecule (1) Expressed on surface of all nucleated somatic cells (2) Presents peptides to cytotoxic T-cells Why is the rate of substitution at 4-fold degenerate sites lower than the rate within pseudogenes? Sub/Site/106 Synonymous substitutions are not selectively neutral! 4 fold deg pseudo Codon Usage is non-random: species-specific, and patterns may vary among genes within a genome. Four fold degenerate site CUG CUA CUC CUU Leucine No matter what nucleotide is substituted, the codon specifies the same amino acid Frequency of tRNA species Frequency of codon usage for highly expressed genes Frequency of codon usage for lowly expressed genes Gene Expression and Codon Bias in Unicellular Organisms Highly Expressed Genes Lowly Expressed Genes • Strong selection for translational efficiency • Weak selection for translational efficiency • Restricted tRNAs used • More tRNAs used • Strong Codon Bias • Weak Codon Bias • Low rate of synonymous substitution (fewer neutral mutations) • High rate of synonymous substitution (more neutral mutations) Subs / Syn Site Prediction: If there is purifying selection against synonymous substitutions, there should be a lower rate of evolution in genes with high codon bias. Low Codon Bias High What about Multicellular Organisms? High Codon Bias Low Codon Bias