Concerted and Birth-and-Death Evolution of Multigene Families
Pennsylvania State University · Agricultural Research Service · +1 more institution
Abstract
Until around 1990, most multigene families were thought to be subject to concerted evolution, in which all member genes of a family evolve as a unit in concert. However, phylogenetic analysis of MHC and other immune system genes showed a quite different evolutionary pattern, and a new model called birth-and-death evolution was proposed. In this model, new genes are created by gene duplication and some duplicate genes stay in the genome for a long time, whereas others are inactivated or deleted from the genome. Later investigations have shown that most non-rRNA genes including highly conserved histone or ubiquitin genes are subject to this type of evolution. However, the controversy over the two models is still…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.96
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 189
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Concerted evolution
- Gene
- Genetics
- Gene duplication
- Phylogenetic tree
- Evolutionary biology
- Genome
- Good health and well-being