Published December 26, 2006 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Rate of Evolution in Brain-Expressed Genes in Humans and Other Primates

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. Acadmia Sinica
  • 3. National Institute of Biomedical Innovation
  • 4. National Institute of Infectious Diseases
  • 5. University of Tokyo
  • 6. National Institute of Genetics
  • 7. Chang Gung University
  • 8. National Health Research Institute
  • 9. Academia Sinica

Description

Brain-expressed genes are known to evolve slowly in mammals. Nevertheless, since brains of higher primates have evolved rapidly, one might expect acceleration in DNA sequence evolution in their brain-expressed genes. In this study, we carried out full-length cDNA sequencing on the brain transcriptome of an Old World monkey (OWM) and then conducted three-way comparisons among (i) mouse, OWM, and human, and (ii) OWM, chimpanzee, and human. Although brain-expressed genes indeed appear to evolve more rapidly in species with more advanced brains (apes > OWM > mouse), a similar lineage effect is observable for most other genes. The broad inclusion of genes in the reference set to represent the genomic average is therefore critical to this type of analysis. Calibrated against the genomic average, the rate of evolution among brain-expressed genes is probably lower (or at most equal) in humans than in chimpanzee and OWM. Interestingly, the trend of slow evolution in coding sequence is no less pronounced among brain-specific genes, vis-à-vis brain-expressed genes in general. The human brain may thus differ from those of our close relatives in two opposite directions: (i) faster evolution in gene expression, and (ii) a likely slowdown in the evolution of protein sequences. Possible explanations and hypotheses are discussed.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pbio.0050013
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10193

Funding

Academia Sinica
Ministry of Health and Welfare
National Institutes of Health
National Science and Technology Council

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Ecology and Evolution