Pattern of new gene origination in a special fish lineage, the flatfishes

Haorong Li, Chunyan Chen, Zhongkai Wang, Kun Wang, Yongxin Li, Wen Wang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Origination of new genes are of inherent interest of evolutionary geneticists for decades, but few studies have addressed the general pattern in a fish lineage. Using our recent released whole genome data of flatfishes, which evolved one of the most specialized body plans in vertebrates, we identified 1541 (6.9% of the starry flounder genes) flatfish-lineage-specific genes. The origination pattern of these flatfish new genes is largely similar to those observed in other vertebrates, as shown by the proportion of DNA-mediated duplication (1317; 85.5%), RNA-mediated duplication (retrogenes; 96; 6.2%), and de novo–origination (128; 8.3%). The emergence rate of species-specific genes is 32.1 per Mya and the whole average level rate for the flatfish-lineage-specific genes is 20.9 per Mya. A large proportion (31.4%) of these new genes have been subjected to selection, in contrast to the 4.0% in primates, while the old genes remain quite similar (66.4% vs. 65.0%). In addition, most of these new genes (70.8%) are found to be expressed, indicating their functionality. This study not only presents one example of systematic new gene identification in a teleost taxon based on comprehensive phylogenomic data, but also shows that new genes may play roles in body planning.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1819
JournalGenes
Volume12
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2021

Keywords

  • Flatfishes
  • New genes
  • Origin
  • Phylogenomic context

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