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Bioinformatis and Evolutionary Genomics Genome Duplications Genome duplications / polyploidy • Polyploid plants are very common and can arise spontaneously in nature by several mechanisms, including meiotic or mitotic failures, and fusion of unreduced (2n) or gametes Gene duplication: trees Gene duplication: blast • These are all duplicates but we do not know the order in which they arose Segmental duplication Whole Genome duplication • Synonym: Polyploidy • Proposed by Ohno (1970) to be a possible major force in genome evolution • Result of errors in meiosis (not in bacteria?) Vertebrate genome duplication Fish: whole genome duplication in teleost fish Saccharomyces cerevisiae • Absence of triplicate regions • Limited portion of the genome mapped (50%); other genomes needed Génolevures • Gene family size in S. cerevisiae is generally conserved in other species • Observation of small duplicated segments from strict & pairwise comparisons Génolevures part deux Wong et al. 2002 PNAS Centromeres Unique amount of fungal genomes 235Mya 600Mya 727Mya 125Mya Paramecium genome duplications Comparison of two scaffolds originating from a common ancestor at the recent WGD Representation of the successive duplications of the Paramecium genome. BRH: best reciprocal hits Percentage identity between paralogous proteins, and comparisons with interspecies distances. Orange: human - mouse Brown: human - fish Pink: Paramecium - Tetrahymena thermophila Plant genome duplications • Detection of genome duplications – Trees – Ks/Similarity “bumps” – Synteny, indirect synteny (comparative genomics), BRH/BBH vs normal blast • Effect of WGD – Most duplicates are lost – Nevertheless thought to be important (origin of flowering plants, origin of vertebrates etc.)