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.
CITATION STYLE
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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