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Sequence-Dependent Gene Conversion: Can Duplicated Genes Diverge Fast Enough to Escape Conversion?
J. Bruce Walsh 1
1 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University
of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 86721
Conversion between duplicated genes limits their independent
evolution. Models in which conversion frequencies decrease as genes diverge
are examined to determine conditions underwhich genes can "escape" further
conversion and hence escape from a gene family. A review of results from various
recombination systems suggests two classes of sequence-dependence models:
(1) the "k-hit" model in which conversion is completely inactivated
by a few (k) mutational events, such as the insertion of a mobile
element, and (2) more general models where conversion frequency gradually
declines as genes diverge through the accumulation of point mutants. Exact
analysis of the k-hit model is given and an approximate analysis
of a more general sequence-dependent model is developed and verified by computer
simulation. If µ is the per nucleotide mutation rate, then neutral duplicated
genes diverging through point mutants are likely to escape conversion provided
2µ/
>> 0.1, where
is the conversion rate between identical
genes. If 2µ/
<< 0.1, the expected number of conversions before
escape increases exponentially so that, for biological purposes, the genes
never escape conversion. For single mutational events sufficient to block
further conversions, occurring at rate
per copy per generation, many
conversions are expected if 2
/
<< 1, while the genes essentially
evolve independently if 2
/
>> 1. Implications of these results
for both models of concerted evolution and the evolution of new gene functions
via gene duplication are discussed.
Accepted on July 11, 1987
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