1. Rate and breadth of protein evolution are only weakly correlated.
- Author
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Naumenko SA and Kondrashov AS
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Substitution, Amino Acids genetics, Amino Acids metabolism, Animals, Drosophila classification, Drosophila genetics, Drosophila metabolism, Genetic Variation, Monodelphis classification, Monodelphis genetics, Monodelphis metabolism, Phylogeny, Proteins genetics, Statistics, Nonparametric, Evolution, Molecular, Genome, Insect, Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Background: Evolution at a protein site can be characterized from two different perspectives, by its rate and by the breadth of the set of acceptable amino acids., Results: There is a weak positive correlation between rates and breadths of evolution, both across individual amino acid sites and across proteins., Conclusions: Rate and breadth are two distinct, and only weakly correlated, characteristics of protein evolution. The most likely explanation of their positive correlation is heterogeneity of selective constraint, such that less functionally important sites evolve faster and can accept more amino acids., (© 2012 Naumenko and Kondrashov; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.)
- Published
- 2012
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