Given the wealth of recent duplicates in plants, this paper might
inspire some future research...
Adaptive evolution of young gene duplicates in mammals
Mira V. Han1, 2. Jeffery P. Demuth1,2,3, 3. Casey L. McGrath2,
4. Claudio Casola1,2 and 5. Matthew W. Hahn1,2,4
Abstract
Duplicate genes act as a source of genetic material from which new
functions arise. They exist in large numbers in every sequenced
eukaryotic genome and may be responsible for many differences in
phenotypes between species. However, recent work searching for the
targets of positive selection in humans has largely ignored duplicated
genes due to complications in orthology assignment. Here we find that a
high proportion of young gene duplicates in the human, macaque, mouse,
and rat genomes have experienced adaptive natural selection.
Approximately 10% of all lineage-specific duplicates show evidence for
positive selection on their protein sequences, larger than any reported
amount of selection among single-copy genes in these lineages using
similar methods. We also find that newly duplicated genes that have
been transposed to new chromosomal locations are significantly more
likely to have undergone positive selection than the ancestral copy.
Human-specific duplicates evolving under adaptive natural selection
include a surprising number of genes involved in neuronal and cognitive
functions. Our results imply that genome scans for selection that
ignore duplicated loci are missing a large fraction of all adaptive
substitutions. The results are also in agreement with the classical
model of evolution by gene duplication, supporting a common role for
neofunctionalization in the long-term maintenance of gene duplicates.
http://genome.cshlp.org/content/19/5/859.abstract?etoc