Eleven ancestral gene families lost in mammals and vertebrates while otherwise universally conserved in animals |
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Authors: | Etienne GJ Danchin Philippe Gouret Pierre Pontarotti |
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Affiliation: | 1. Phylogenomics Laboratory, EA 3781 EGEE, Universite de Provence, Marseilles, France 2. Glycogenomics and Biomedical Strucural Biology, AFMB, UMR 6098 CNRS/Université de Provence/Université de la Méditerrannée, Marseilles, France
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Abstract: | Background Gene losses played a role which may have been as important as gene and genome duplications and rearrangements, in modelling today species' genomes from a common ancestral set of genes. The set and diversity of protein-coding genes in a species has direct output at the functional level. While gene losses have been reported in all the major lineages of the metazoan tree of life, none have proposed a focus on specific losses in the vertebrates and mammals lineages. In contrast, genes lost in protostomes (i.e. arthropods and nematodes) but still present in vertebrates have been reported and extensively detailed. This probable over-anthropocentric way of comparing genomes does not consider as an important phenomena, gene losses in species that are usually described as "higher". However reporting universally conserved genes throughout evolution that have recently been lost in vertebrates and mammals could reveal interesting features about the evolution of our genome, particularly if these losses can be related to losses of capability. |
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