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Molecular Biology and Evolution, Vol 12, 980-987, Copyright © 1995 by Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Gene products of Escherichia coli: sequence comparisons and common ancestries

B Labedan and M Riley
Institut de Genetique et Microbiologie, Universite de Paris-Sud.

Sequences of 1,862 chromosomally encoded Escherichia coli K12 proteins were examined to identify genes likely to have arisen by duplication of genes in an ancestral chromosome. The criteria for sequence relatedness were an alignment of at least 100 amino acid residues and a PAM distance (number of accepted point mutations per 100 residues separating two sequences) below 250. A total of 971 of the 1,862 proteins examined were found in 2,329 sequence-related pairs that met these criteria. Most proteins of the sequence-related pairs were related in cellular function, as judged by biochemical and/or physiological features. Many of the pairs of proteins could be grouped into sequence-related families. If such groupings were generated from ancestral genes by duplication and divergence events, through these sequence comparisons we can identify putative ancestral sequences of the present-day genes of E. coli and other organisms. The results suggest that the 971 paralogous genes could have been derived from only 204 ancestral genes. We have also shown that the process of duplication and divergence is not the exclusive mechanism of evolution of all E. coli genes. Indeed, the relationships among the sequences of multiple (in the sense of redundant) enzymes indicate that nearly half could have arisen either by convergent evolution or by lateral transfer. Therefore, not all functionally related genes need arise by duplication and divergence.
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