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14 - Estimating selection pressures on alignments of coding sequences

from Section V - Molecular adaptation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Philippe Lemey
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
Marco Salemi
Affiliation:
University of California, Irvine
Anne-Mieke Vandamme
Affiliation:
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
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Summary

THEORY

Introduction

Understanding the selective pressures that have shaped genetic variation is a central goal in the study of evolutionary biology. As non-synonymous mutations can directly affect protein function, they are more likely to influence the fitness of an organism than mutations that leave the amino acid sequence unchanged (i.e. synonymous mutations). Under negative or purifying selection, less “fit” non-synonymous substitutions accumulate more slowly than synonymous substitutions, and under diversifying or positive selection, the converse is true. Therefore, an important concept in the analysis of coding sequences is that the comparison of relative rates of non-synonymous (β) and synonymous (α) substitutions can provide information on the type of selection that has acted on a given set of protein-coding sequences. The ratio ω = β/α (also referred to as dN/dS or KA / KS) has become a standard measure of selective pressure (Nielsen & Yang, 1998); ω ≈ 1 signifies neutral evolution, ω < 1 – negative selection and ω > 1 – positive selection.

There are five fundamental questions which can be answered with existing methods and software tools that estimate such substitution rates.

Type
Chapter
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The Phylogenetic Handbook
A Practical Approach to Phylogenetic Analysis and Hypothesis Testing
, pp. 419 - 490
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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