Asymmetric functional divergence of duplicate genes in yeast

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Abstract

Most duplicate genes are eliminated from a genome shortly after duplication, but those that remain are an important source of biochemical diversity. Here, I present evidence from genome-scale protein-protein interaction data, microarray expression data, and large-scale gene knockout data that this diversification is often asymmetrical: one duplicate usually shows significantly more molecular or genetic interactions than the other. I propose a model that can explain this divergence pattern if asymmetrically diverging duplicate gene pairs show increased robustness to deleterious mutations.

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APA

Wagner, A. (2002). Asymmetric functional divergence of duplicate genes in yeast. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 19(10), 1760–1768. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a003998

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