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Previous evolutionary models of duplicate gene evolution have overlooked the pivotal role of genome architecture. Here, we show that proximity-based regulatory recruitment by distally duplicated genes is an efficient mechanism for modulating tissue-specific production of preexisting proteins. By leveraging genomic asymmetries, we performed a coexpression analysis on tissue data to show the generality of enhancer capture-divergence (ECD) as a significant evolutionary driver of asymmetric, distally duplicated genes. We use the recently evolved gene / as an example of the ECD process. By assaying genome-wide chromosomal conformations in multiple species, we show that was inserted near a preexisting, long-distance three-dimensional genomic interaction. We then use this data to identify a newly found enhancer (), buried within the coding region of the highly conserved, essential gene , that likely neofunctionalized . Last, we demonstrate ancestral transcriptional coregulation of 's future insertion site, illustrating how enhancer capture provides a highly evolvable, one-step solution to Ohno's dilemma.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adn6625 | DOI Listing |
Sci Adv
December 2024
Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
Previous evolutionary models of duplicate gene evolution have overlooked the pivotal role of genome architecture. Here, we show that proximity-based regulatory recruitment by distally duplicated genes is an efficient mechanism for modulating tissue-specific production of preexisting proteins. By leveraging genomic asymmetries, we performed a coexpression analysis on tissue data to show the generality of enhancer capture-divergence (ECD) as a significant evolutionary driver of asymmetric, distally duplicated genes.
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