Date: Tue, 13 Feb 2001 08:54:17 -0000
Reply-To: "Ian Pitchford" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [evol-psych] Genome project opens the book on human evolution 

FOR RELEASE: 12 FEBRUARY 2001 AT 10:00 ET US
University of Chicago Medical Center
http://www.medcenter.uchicago.edu/

Genome project opens the book on human evolution

Like an enormous library, the human genome project now awaits the work of a
generation of scientists who will catalogue and organize its contents and
begin
to read and understand its secrets. Researchers at the University of Chicago
open the book on human molecular evolution with a paper in the February 12,
2001, issue of Nature. Evolutionary genomics, using computational analysis of
whole genomes to directly address important questions about evolutionary
biology, can now be applied to the understanding of human genes and their
regulatory sequences.

"In this first exploration of the human genome data, we addressed questions
interesting to molecular evolution that could be answered in some detail in a
short time frame," said Wen-Hsiung Li, George Wells Beadle Distinguished
Service Professor in the department of ecology and evolution at the University
of Chicago.

One of the puzzles of human evolution has been the much higher percentage of
repetitive DNA, stretches of DNA that are not genes but that share the same
sequence of base pairs, in human than in other invertebrate genomes. The
function of this so-called "junk DNA" has been a mystery. These repetitive
elements (transposable elements) are found so frequently in our genome mainly
because they are inserted more frequently into our genome than they can be got
rid of, not because they confer advantage to us. The University of Chicago
researchers confirmed the very high percentage of repetitive elements in the
human genome--their analysis found it to be 43 percent, while repetitive
elements in the genomes of organisms as diverse as Drosophila (fruit flies)
and
Arabidopsis (a mustard plant) average10 percent. In addition, they were
able to
look at the location of these elements.

These repetitive elements, particularly the element known as Alu, were
found in
a surprising number of proteins.

"We have always assumed that insertions of repetitive elements into genes
would
be deleterious, that they would impair the protein's ability to function,"
said
Li. "Instead we find a surprisingly large number in translated proteins."

The repetitive elements seem to insert into non-coding regions of a gene
and be
incorporated into protein through alternative splicing. Because the elements
contain splicing sites--places where the editing machinery of the cell cuts
genes for translation into proteins--new proteins may be created as the coding
regions of the old gene are reshuffled, elongated or truncated. The location
and distribution of the human repetitive elements may hint at their role in
gene evolution and species differentiation. Many proteins also may have
evolved
by picking up structural or functional elements, called domains, from other
proteins and mixing and matching these elements to develop altered or improved
functions. The percentage of human proteins that are considered mosaics, i.e.
they have more than one domain, is quite high, 28 percent.

Li's group looked at how often domain sharing is conserved: where two or more
proteins have the same combination of domains. This, too, was very high in
human proteins--for example there are 88 cases where three proteins share two
types of domain--indicating that this may be important to protein
evolution. In
comparing domain sharing in the human genome to three other organisms,
fruitflies, nematodes and yeast, the researchers found that domain sharing is
both common and highly conserved.

Olfactory receptors, immunoglobulins and keratins were among the largest
families of proteins. The largest gene family in the human genome was the
remnant of an invader, reverse transcriptase, a gene found in the L1
repetitive
element--probably an early interloper into the genome capable of copying and
reinserting itself millions of times.

"We expected olfactory receptors to be high because even the nematode has a
large number," said Li. "But we were surprised by the fourth largest
family--keratins."

"Many challenges to our analysis of the human genome remain," said Li. "As the
human genome is better annotated and databases for genes and proteins are
improved more rigorous analysis will be possible."


###
Wen-Hsiung Li is the George Wells Beadle Distinguished Service Professor in
the
department of ecology and evolution at the University of Chicago.

Anton Nekrutenko is a research associate in the department of ecology and
evolution at the University of Chicago.

Zhwngglong Gu and Haldong Wang are graduate students in the department of
ecology and evolution at the University of Chicago.

This research was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health.
http://www.eurekalert.org/releases/ucmc-gpo021201.html


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