Quantifying the influence of genetic context on duplicated mammalian genes

ORAL

Abstract

Gene duplication is a fundamental part of evolutionary innovation. While single-gene duplications frequently exhibit asymmetric evolutionary rates between paralogs, the extent to which genetic context influence this phenomenon remains unclear. In this study, we investigate the role of genetic context in shaping evolutionary divergence within multi-gene duplications, leveraging microsynteny to differentiate source and target copies. Using a dataset of 193 mammalian genome assemblies and a bird outgroup, we systematically analyze patterns of sequence divergence between duplicated genes and reference orthologs. We find that target copies, those relocated to new genomic environments, exhibit elevated evolutionary rates compared to source copies in the ancestral location. This asymmetry is influenced by the distance between copies and the size of the target copy. We also demonstrate that the polarization of rate asymmetry in paralogs, the "choice" of the slowly evolving copy, is biased towards collective, block-wise polarization in multi-gene duplications. Our findings highlight the importance of genetic context in modulating post-duplication divergence, where differences in cis-regulatory elements and co-expressed gene clusters between source and target copies may be responsible. This study presents a large-scale test of asymmetric evolution in multi-gene duplications, offering new insight into how genome architecture shapes functional diversification of paralogs.

*NSF PHY-2412651 NSF PHY-2019745 NIH  R35-GM146852

Publication: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.04.03.647042v2

Presenters

  • Michele Di Pierro

    • Northeastern University

Authors

  • Alexander S Moffett

    • Northeastern University
  • Andrea Falcon Cortes

    • Northeastern University
  • Michele Di Pierro

    • Northeastern University