• Title of article

    Quantification of the Elevated Rate of Domain Rearrangements in Metazoa

  • Author/Authors

    Diana Ekman، نويسنده , , ?sa K. Bj?rklund، نويسنده , , Arne Elofsson، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    1337
  • To page
    1348
  • Abstract
    Most eukaryotic proteins consist of multiple domains created through gene fusions or internal duplications. The most frequent change of a domain architecture (DA) is insertion or deletion of a domain at the N or C terminus. Still, the mechanisms underlying the evolution of multidomain proteins are not very well studied. Here, we have studied the evolution of multidomain architectures (MDA), guided by evolutionary information in the form of a phylogenetic tree. Our results show that Pfam domain families and MDAs have been created with comparable rates (0.1–1 per million years (My)). The major changes in DA evolution have occurred in the process of multicellularization and within the metazoan lineage. In contrast, creation of domains seems to have been frequent already in the early evolution. Furthermore, most of the architectures have been created from older domains or architectures, whereas novel domains are mainly found in single-domain proteins. However, a particular group of exon-bordering domains may have contributed to the rapid evolution of novel multidomain proteins in metazoan organisms. Finally, MDAs have evolved predominantly through insertions of domains, whereas domain deletions are less common. In conclusion, the rate of creation of multidomain proteins has accelerated in the metazoan lineage, which may partly be explained by the frequent insertion of exon-bordering domains into new architectures. However, our results indicate that other factors have contributed as well.
  • Keywords
    protein evolution , Pfam , exon shuffling , metazoan evolution , multidomain protein
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Record number

    1249772