Quick Links
Organizers
College of Life Sciences, Peking University
Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, CAS
State Key Laboratory
of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, CAS
Sponsors

Peking University
![]()
The 111 Project

National Natural Science Foundation of China
Higher Education Press
The pattern of new gene evolution shaped by Darwinian selection
University of Chicago, USA
Abstract
It is known that a lot of new genes originated and evolved in the genomes of various organisms (Long et al, 2003; Nature Rev Genet; Kaessmann et al, 2009, Nature Rev Genet). Are there any patterns or rules associated with these new gene origination events? What are the evolutionary forces responsible for these patterns? The early investigation of the new genes generated via RNA-based duplication revealed a directional movement of genes that are male biased expressed in Drosophila and mammals (Betran et al, 2002, Genome Res; Emerson et al, 2004, Science). The comparison of the chromosomal distribution of the male gene traffics with the mutation distribution, as shown in pseudogenes in mammals, revealed that Darwinian positive selection for new male functions were governing these gene traffics between the X chromosomes and autosomes. We recently found that the directional gene movement as found in the new genes formed via RNA-based duplication were also true of the movement of the new genes generated by the DNA-based duplication, a more general form of duplication (Vibranovsky et al, 2009, Genome Res). The consequence of long term evolution is that most male genes that were biased expressed in male germlines would be accumulated on autosomes, as the microarray experiments confirmed. Two levels of mechanistic processes, the male germline X-inactivation and sex-related population genetic processes, might be involved in the male gene movement.
Manyuan Long
University of Chicago, USA
Biography
Manyuan Long is currently Professor of Genetics and Evolution in Department of Ecology and Evolution at the University of Chicago. Born in Sichuan, he received Ph.D. from Department of Genetics, at University of California at Davis, mentored by Charles Langley and John Gillespie; he did his postdoctoral training at Harvard University in Departments of Molecular and Cellular Biology and Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, mentored by Walter Gilbert and Richard Lewontin. He joined the Chicago faculty in 1997. He is interested in the problems of new gene origination and genome evolution impacted by various evolutionary forces including natural selection and the related molecular genetic mechanisms.
