Constraints on genes shape long-term conservation of macro-synteny in metazoan genomes

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Abstract

Background: Many metazoan genomes conserve chromosome-scale gene linkage relationships (" macro-synteny" ) from the common ancestor of multicellular animal life 1234, but the biological explanation for this conservation is still unknown. Double cut and join (DCJ) is a simple, well-studied model of neutral genome evolution amenable to both simulation and mathematical analysis 5, but as we show here, it is not sufficent to explain long-term macro-synteny conservation.Results: We examine a family of simple (one-parameter) extensions of DCJ to identify models and choices of parameters consistent with the levels of macro- and micro-synteny conservation observed among animal genomes. Our software implements a flexible strategy for incorporating genomic context into the DCJ model to incorporate various types of genomic context (" DCJ-[C]" ), and is available as open source software from http://github.com/putnamlab/dcj-c.Conclusions: A simple model of genome evolution, in which DCJ moves are allowed only if they maintain chromosomal linkage among a set of constrained genes, can simultaneously account for the level of macro-synteny conservation and for correlated conservation among multiple pairs of species. Simulations under this model indicate that a constraint on approximately 7% of metazoan genes is sufficient to constrain genome rearrangement to an average rate of 25 inversions and 1.7 translocations per million years. © 2011 Lv et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Lv, J., Havlak, P., & Putnam, N. H. (2011). Constraints on genes shape long-term conservation of macro-synteny in metazoan genomes. BMC Bioinformatics, 12(SUPPL. 9). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-12-S9-S11

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