OrthoAlign, an algorithm for the gene order alignment problem (alignment of orthologs), accounting for most genome-wide evolutionary events such as duplications, losses, rearrangements, and substitutions, was presented. OrthoAlign was used in a phylogenetic framework to infer the evolution of transfer RNA repertoires of 50 fully sequenced bacteria in the Bacillus genus. A prevalence of gene duplications and losses over rearrangement events was observed. The average rate of duplications inferred in Bacillus was 24 times lower than the one reported in Escherichia coli, whereas the average rates of losses and inversions were both 12 times lower. These rates were extremely low, suggesting a strong selective pressure acting on tRNA gene repertoires in Bacillus. An exhaustive analysis of the type, location, distribution, and length of evolutionary events was provided, together with ancestral configurations. OrthoAlign can be downloaded at: http://www.iro.umontreal.ca/∼mabrouk/.
CITATION STYLE
Tremblay-Savard, O., Benzaid, B., Lang, B. F., & El-Mabrouk, N. (2015). Evolution of tRNA repertoires in bacillus inferred with OrthoAlign. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 32(6), 1643–1656. https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msv029
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