Old genes experience stronger translational selection than young genes

Hongyan Yin, Lina Ma, Guangyu Wang, Mengwei Li, Zhang Zhang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Selection on synonymous codon usage for translation efficiency and/or accuracy has been identified as a widespread mechanism in many living organisms. However, it remains unknown whether translational selection associates closely with gene age and acts differentially on genes with different evolutionary ages. To address this issue, here we investigate the strength of translational selection acting on different aged genes in human. Our results show that old genes present stronger translational selection than young genes, demonstrating that translational selection correlates positively with gene age. We further explore the difference of translational selection in duplicates vs. singletons and in housekeeping vs. tissue-specific genes. We find that translational selection acts comparably in old singletons and old duplicates and stronger translational selection in old genes is contributed primarily by housekeeping genes. For young genes, contrastingly, singletons experience stronger translational selection than duplicates, presumably due to redundant function of duplicated genes during their early evolutionary stage. Taken together, our results indicate that translational selection acting on a gene would not be constant during all stages of evolution, associating closely with gene age.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)29-34
Number of pages6
JournalGene
Volume590
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 15 2016

Keywords

  • Codon usage bias
  • Duplicate
  • Gene age
  • Housekeeping gene
  • Singleton
  • Translational selection

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Genetics

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