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Comparative Genomics and Phylogenetics

Comparative Genomics and Phylogenetics. Chi-Cheng Lin, Ph.D., Professor Department of Computer Science Winona State University – Rochester Center clin@winona.edu. Outline. Comparative Genomics Phylogenetics Phylogenetic Tree Phylgenetics Applications Gene Tree vs. Species Tree.

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Comparative Genomics and Phylogenetics

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  1. Comparative Genomics and Phylogenetics Chi-Cheng Lin, Ph.D., ProfessorDepartment of Computer ScienceWinona State University – Rochester Centerclin@winona.edu

  2. Outline • Comparative Genomics • Phylogenetics • Phylogenetic Tree • Phylgenetics Applications • Gene Tree vs. Species Tree

  3. Comparative Genomics • Analysis and comparison of genomes from different species • Purposes • to gain a better understanding of how species have evolved • to determine the function of genes and non-coding regions of the genome • The functions of human genes and other DNA regions often are revealed by studying their parallels in nonhumans. • Researchers have learned a great deal about the function of human genes by examining their counterparts in simpler model organisms such as the mouse.

  4. Comparative Genomics • Features looked at when comparing genomes: • sequence similarity • gene location • length and number of coding regions within genes • amount of non-coding DNA in each genome • highly conserved regions maintained in organisms • Computer programs that can line up multiple genomes and look for regions of similarity among them are used. • Many of these sequence-similarity tools, such as BLAST, are accessible to the public over the Internet.

  5. Of Mice and Men • The full complement of human chromosomes can be cut into about 150 pieces, then reassembled into a reasonable approximation of the mouse genome. • The colors of the mouse chromosomes and the numbers alongside indicate the human chromosomes containing homologous segments. • This piecewise similarity between the mouse and human genomes means that insights into mouse genetics are likely to illuminate human genetics as well. Source: http://www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/Human_Genome/publicat/tko/06_img.html

  6. Phylogenetics • Phylogenetics • Study of evolutionary relationships (sequences / species) • Infer evolutionary relationship from shared features • Phylogeny • Relationship between organisms with common ancestor • Phylogenetic tree • Graph representing evolutionary history of sequences / species Source of image: http://superfrenchie.com/Pics/Blog/culture/evolution.jpg

  7. Phylogenetics • Premise • Members sharing common evolutionary history (i.e., common ancestor) are more related to each other • Can infer evolutionary relationship from shared features • Long history of phylogenetics • Historically - based on analysis of observable features (e.g., morphology, behavior, geographical distribution) • Now - mostly analysis of DNA / RNA / amino acid sequences

  8. Phylogenetics • Goals • Understand relationship of sequence to similar sequences • Construct phylogenetic tree representing evolutionary history • Motivation / application • Identify closely related families • Use phylogenetic relationships to predict gene function • Follow changes in rapidly evolving species (e.g., viruses) • Analysis can reveal which genes are under selection • Provide epidemiology for tracking infections & vectors • Relationship to multiple sequence alignment (MSA) • Alignment of sequences should take evolution into account • More precise phylogenetic relationships  Improved MSA • CLUTALW (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/clustalw/), a popular MSA program, can produce alignment that is then used to build phylogenetic tree.

  9. Phylogenetic Tree Terminology • Leaf / terminal node / taxon • Node with no children • Original sequence • Join / internal node • Point of joining two leaves / clusters • Inferred common ancestor • Branches • Represent change • Length represents evolutionary distance • Cluster / clade • All sequences in subtree with common ancestor (treated as single node)

  10. Phylogenetic Tree Terminology • Binary tree • Each edge that splits must connect to two children • Rooted tree • Contains a single ancestor of all nodes • Evolution proceeds from root to leaves of tree • Unrooted tree • No single ancestor node • No direction of evolution • Molecular clock assumption (rooted tree) • Mutations occur at constant rate • Distance from root to leaves same for each leaf

  11. Orangutan Orangutan Human Human Chimpanzee Gorilla Chimpanzee Gorilla Rooted and Unrooted Trees Rooted Tree Unrooted Tree Direction of evolution Root

  12. Possible Ways of Drawing Tree

  13. Applications – Building Tree of Life

  14. Source: http://gi.cebitec.uni-bielefeld.de/people/boecker/bilder/tree_of_life_new.gif

  15. Applications – Mammal Systematics Source: http://www.isem.univ-montp2.fr/PPP/PM/RES/Phylo/Mamm/PHYLMOL-Placentalia%7EEnglish.jpg

  16. Application – Epidemiology (CSI!) • Which patients are more likely infected by the dentist? Source: http://trc.ucdavis.edu/djbegun/Lect_12.1.html

  17. Application – Modern Human Evolution • Based on mtDNA genome • Example • Global mtDNA diversity analysis (Ingman et al., 2000 Nature. Volume 408:708-713) • Africans have twice as much diversity among them as do non-Africans  Africans have a longer genetic history • More recent population expansion for non-Africans • Africans and non-Africans diverged recently Out of Africa Source of image: Ingman et al., 2000, Nature. Volume 408: 708-713

  18. Gene Tree vs. Species Tree • Gene typically diverges before speciation • Phylogenetic tree based on divergence of one single homologous gene • Evolutionary history of gene • Gene tree rather than species tree • More genes are needed to build species trees Source of image: http://www.bioinf2.leeds.ac.uk/b/genomics.html

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