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Gene's 'selective signature' aids detection of natural selection in microbial evolution

Scientists at MIT have come up with a mathematical approach for analyzing a protein simultaneously in a set of ecologically distinct species to identify occurrences of natural selection in an organism鈥檚 evolution.

The new method determines the 鈥渟elective signature鈥 of a gene, that is, the pattern of fast or slow evolution of that gene across a group of species, and uses that signature to infer gene function or to map changes to ecological shifts.

By reversing the usual order of inquiry鈥攕tudying an organism, then trying to identify which genes are involved in a particular function鈥攖he scientists hope to hasten the understanding of microbial evolution by taking advantage of the nearly 2,500 microbes already sequenced.

鈥淏y comparing across species, we looked for changes in genes that reflect natural selection and then asked, 鈥楬ow does this gene relate to the ecology of the species it occurs in?鈥欌 said Eric Alm, the Doherty Assistant Professor of Ocean Utilization in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. 鈥淭he selective signature method also allows us to focus on a single species and better understand the selective pressures on it.鈥

鈥淥ur hope is that other researchers will take this tool and apply it to sets of related species with fully sequenced genomes to understand the genetic basis of that ecological divergence,鈥 said graduate student B. Jesse Shapiro, who co-authored with Alm a paper published in the February issue of PLoS Genetics.

Their work also suggests that evolution occurs on functional modules鈥攇enes that may not sit together on the genome, but that encode proteins that perform similar functions.

鈥淲hen we see similar results across all the genes in a pathway, it suggests the genomic landscape may be organized into functional modules even at the level of natural selection,鈥 said Alm. 鈥淚f that鈥檚 true, it may be easier than expected to understand the complex evolutionary pressures on a cell.鈥

鈥淚n a single species, a whole set of genes in the same module tend to change together,鈥 said Shapiro. 鈥淚dentifying these changes brings us a step closer to understanding the ecological basis of selection in a species and how changes at the genetic level affect the organisms interactions with its environment.鈥

For example, in Idiomarina loihiensis, a marine bacterium that has adapted to life near sulfurous hydrothermal vents in the ocean floor, the genes involved in metabolizing sugar and the amino acid phenylalanine underwent significant changes (over hundreds of millions of years) that may help the bacterium obtain carbon from amino acids rather than from sugars, a necessity for life in that ecological niche. In one of I. loihiensis鈥 sister species, Colwellia psychrerythraea, some of those same genes have been lost altogether, an indication that sugar metabolism is no longer important for Colwellia.

Shapiro and Alm focused on 744 protein families among 30 species of gamma-proteobacteria that shared a common ancestor roughly 1 to 2 billion years ago. These bacteria include the laboratory model organism E. coli, as well as intracellular parasites of aphids, pathogens like the bacteria that cause cholera, and soil and plant bacteria. They mapped the evolutionary distance of each species from the ancestor and incorporated information about the gene family (for instance, important proteins evolve more slowly than less vital ones) and the normal rate of evolution in a particular species鈥 genome in order to determine a gene鈥檚 selective signature.

鈥淭hese are experiments we could never perform in a lab,鈥 said Alm. 鈥淏ut Mother Nature has put genes into an environment and run an evolutionary experiment over billions of years. What we鈥檙e doing is mining that data to see if genes that perform a similar function, say motility, evolve at the same rate in different species. To the extent that they differ, it helps us to understand how change in core genes drives functional divergence between species across the tree of life.鈥

Source: Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Citation: Gene's 'selective signature' aids detection of natural selection in microbial evolution (2008, March 18) retrieved 31 May 2025 from /news/2008-03-gene-signature-aids-natural-microbial.html
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