Phylogenomic analysis demonstrates a pattern of rare and long-lasting concerted evolution in prokaryotes

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Abstract

Concerted evolution, where paralogs in the same species show higher sequence similarity to each other than to orthologs in other species, is widely found in many species. However, cases of concerted evolution that last for hundreds of millions of years are very rare. By genome-wide analysis of a broad selection of prokaryotes, we provide strong evidence of recurrent concerted evolution in 26 genes, most of which have lasted more than ~500 million years. We find that most concertedly evolving genes are key members of important pathways, and encode proteins from the same complexes and/or pathways, suggesting coevolution of genes via concerted evolution to maintain gene balance. We also present LRCE-DB, a comprehensive online repository of long-lasting concerted evolution. Collectively, our study reveals that although most duplicated genes may diverge in sequence over a long period, on rare occasions this constraint can be breached, leading to unexpected long-lasting concerted evolution in a recurrent manner.

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Wang, S., & Chen, Y. (2018). Phylogenomic analysis demonstrates a pattern of rare and long-lasting concerted evolution in prokaryotes. Communications Biology, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-018-0014-x

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