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Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2006 Dec 27;64(5):542–554. doi: 10.1007/s00018-006-6453-4

Current topics in genome evolution: Molecular mechanisms of new gene formation

D V Babushok 1, E M Ostertag 1,2, H H Kazazian Jr 1,
PMCID: PMC11138463  PMID: 17192808

Abstract.

Comparative genome analyses reveal that most functional domains of human genes have homologs in widely divergent species. These shared functional domains, however, are differentially shuffled among evolutionary lineages to produce an increasing number of domain architectures. Combined with duplication and adaptive evolution, domain shuffling is responsible for the great phenotypic complexity of higher eukaryotes. Although the domain-shuffling hypothesis is generally accepted, determining the molecular mechanisms that lead to domain shuffling and novel gene creation has been challenging, as sequence features accompanying the formation of known genes have been obscured by accumulated mutations. The growing availability of genome sequences and EST databases allows us to study the characteristics of newly emerged genes. Here we review recent genome-wide DNA and EST analyses, and discuss the three major molecular mechanisms of gene formation: (1) atypical spicing, both within and between genes, followed by adaptation, (2) tandem and interspersed segmental duplications, and (3) retrotransposition events.

Keywords. New gene formation, exon-shuffling, alternative splicing, gene duplication, retrotransposition

Footnotes

Received 18 October 2006; received after revision 18 November 2006; accepted 28 November 2006


Articles from Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS are provided here courtesy of Springer

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