The life history of retrocopies illuminates the evolution of new mammalian genes
- Francesco Nicola Carelli1,2,
- Takashi Hayakawa3,4,
- Yasuhiro Go5,6,7,
- Hiroo Imai8,
- Maria Warnefors1,2,9,10 and
- Henrik Kaessmann1,2,9,10
- 1Center for Integrative Genomics, University of Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland;
- 2Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland;
- 3Department of Wildlife Science (Nagoya Railroad Company, Limited), Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, Inuyama, Aichi 484-8506, Japan;
- 4Japan Monkey Center, Inuyama, Aichi 484-0081, Japan;
- 5Department of Brain Sciences, Center for Novel Science Initiatives, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Okazaki, Aichi 444-8585, Japan;
- 6Department of Developmental Physiology, National Institute for Physiological Sciences, Okazaki, Aichi 444-8585, Japan;
- 7Department of Physiological Sciences, School of Life Science, SOKENDAI (The Graduate University for Advanced Studies), Okazaki, Aichi 484-8585, Japan;
- 8Department of Cellular and Molecular Biology, Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, Inuyama, Aichi 484-8506, Japan
- Corresponding authors: fr.carelli{at}gmail.com, Maria.Warnefors{at}gmail.com, h.kaessmann{at}zmbh.uni-heidelberg.de
Abstract
New genes contribute substantially to adaptive evolutionary innovation, but the functional evolution of new mammalian genes has been little explored at a broad scale. Previous work established mRNA-derived gene duplicates, known as retrocopies, as models for the study of new gene origination. Here we combine mammalian transcriptomic and epigenomic data to unveil the processes underlying the evolution of stripped-down retrocopies into complex new genes. We show that although some robustly expressed retrocopies are transcribed from preexisting promoters, most evolved new promoters from scratch or recruited proto-promoters in their genomic vicinity. In particular, many retrocopy promoters emerged from ancestral enhancers (or bivalent regulatory elements) or are located in CpG islands not associated with other genes. We detected 88–280 selectively preserved retrocopies per mammalian species, illustrating that these mechanisms facilitated the birth of many functional retrogenes during mammalian evolution. The regulatory evolution of originally monoexonic retrocopies was frequently accompanied by exon gain, which facilitated co-option of distant promoters and allowed expression of alternative isoforms. While young retrogenes are often initially expressed in the testis, increased regulatory and structural complexities allowed retrogenes to functionally diversify and evolve somatic organ functions, sometimes as complex as those of their parents. Thus, some retrogenes evolved the capacity to temporarily substitute for their parents during the process of male meiotic X inactivation, while others rendered parental functions superfluous, allowing for parental gene loss. Overall, our reconstruction of the “life history” of mammalian retrogenes highlights retroposition as a general model for understanding new gene birth and functional evolution.
Footnotes
-
↵9 Joint senior authors
-
[Supplemental material is available for this article.]
-
Article published online before print. Article, supplemental material, and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.198473.115.
- Received August 18, 2015.
- Accepted December 21, 2015.
This article is distributed exclusively by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the first six months after the full-issue publication date (see http://genome.cshlp.org/site/misc/terms.xhtml). After six months, it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.











