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Exon-phase symmetry and intrinsic structural disorder promote modular evolution in the human genome
Authors
Adams
Balazs
+61 more
Buljan
Burra
Corvelo
Daughdrill
Davey
Davey
Diella
Dosztanyi
Dosztanyi
Dyson
Eva Schad
Fedorov
Fisher
Fujita
Fuxreiter
Fuxreiter
Gilbert
Greaser
Grover
Hernandez
Kaessmann
Kalmar
Kaplon
Kato
Kawasaki
Kiss
Kiss
Kovacs
Lajos Kalmar
Lee
Li
Long
Meszaros
Mittag
Modrek
Mosca
Oliver
Pancsa
Patthy
Patthy
Patthy
Pentony
Peter Tompa
Punta
Romero
Sarkar
Seet
Sire
Tompa
Tompa
Tompa
Tompa
Tompa
Tompa
Uversky
Van Roey
Vucetic
Ward
Weatheritt
Weatheritt
Zhang
Publication date
1 January 2013
Publisher
'Oxford University Press (OUP)'
Doi
Abstract
A key signature of module exchange in the genome is phase symmetry of exons, suggestive of exon shuffling events that occurred without disrupting translation reading frame. At the protein level, intrinsic structural disorder may be another key element because disordered regions often serve as functional elements that can be effectively integrated into a protein structure. Therefore, we asked whether exon-phase symmetry in the human genome and structural disorder in the human proteome are connected, signalling such evolutionary mechanisms in the assembly of multi-exon genes. We found an elevated level of structural disorder of regions encoded by symmetric exons and a preferred symmetry of exons encoding for mostly disordered regions (>70% predicted disorder). Alternatively spliced symmetric exons tend to correspond to the most disordered regions. The genes of mostly disordered proteins (>70% predicted disorder) tend to be assembled from symmetric exons, which often arise by internal tandem duplications. Preponderance of certain types of short motifs (e.g. SH3-binding motif) and domains (e.g. high-mobility group domains) suggests that certain disordered modules have been particularly effective in exon-shuffling events. Our observations suggest that structural disorder has facilitated modular assembly of complex genes in evolution of the human genome. © 2013 The Author(s)
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oai:real.mtak.hu:7125
Last time updated on 12/12/2013
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info:doi/10.1093%2Fnar%2Fgkt11...
Last time updated on 05/06/2019