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A modified vector, M13-102, is described which utilizes the previously reported M13-100 direct selection strategy for shotgun cloning [Guilfoyle and Smith, Nucleic Acids Res. 22 (1994) 100-107]. In these vectors, direct selection replaces the need for phosphatase treatment of vector DNA and is achieved by insertional inactivation of M13 gene X. When not inactivated, the engineered overproduction...
The pAC92 plasmid is a direct screening cloning vector which allows positive selection of recombinant clones (re-clones). This new high-copy-number plasmid vector encodes ampicillin resistance and carries the Bacillus subtilis α-amylase (α-Amy)-encoding gene (amy) containing a multiple cloning site. The pAC92 plasmid confers to Escherichia coli transformants an amylolytic phenotype easily detected...
To predict the amino acid sites important for the clearance of hepatitis C virus (HCV) subtype 1b in vivo, positively selected amino acid sites were detected by analyzing the sequence data collected from the international DNA databank. The rate of nonsynonymous substitutions per nonsynonymous site was compared with that of synonymous substitutions per synonymous site for each codon site in the entire...
Vertebrate olfactory receptors (OR) exists as the largest multigene family, scattered throughout the genome in clusters. Studies have shown that different animals possess remarkably diverse set of OR genes to recognize diverse odor molecules. In order to examine the evolutionary process of OR diversification, we examined three OR gene subfamilies from Japanese medaka fish (seven lines sampled from...
The PEPP genes are a recently described subfamily of mouse homeobox genes preferentially expressed in reproductive tissues. Pem, the founding member of the PEPP subfamily, has undergone rapid divergence due to positive selection, rendering the identification of its human orthologue difficult. Here we report the isolation and characterization of two human homeobox genes, hPEPP1 and hPEPP2, that are...
A new method for reconstructing phylogenetic relationships of within-host (patient) viral evolution from noncontemporaneous samples is presented. This method has two important features: noncontemporaneous viral samples can be dealt with by a simple computing algorithm, and both neutral and adaptive evolution patterns occurring during the process of viral evolution can be estimated. In our previous...
For development of effective vaccines against viruses, it is of importance to choose appropriate epitopes as the target for immunization. These epitopes should eventually be determined experimentally, but it would be helpful if we could predict candidate epitopes computationally because it accelerates the entire process. To predict candidate epitopes for immunization, it is of great interest to characterize...
The gene family of killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs) in primates provides the first line of defense against virus infection and tumor transformation. Interacting with MHC class I molecules, KIRs can regulate the cytotoxic activity of natural killer (NK) cells and distinguish the tumor and virus infected cells from normal body cells. Phylogenetic analysis and comparison of domain structures...
Growth hormone is a classic molecule in the study of the molecular clock hypothesis as it exhibits a relatively constant rate of evolution in most mammalian orders except primates and artiodactyls, where dramatically enhanced rate of evolution (25–50-fold) has been reported. The rapid evolution of primate growth hormone occurred after the divergence of tarsiers and simians, but before the separation...
Parsimony and Bayesian methods have been developed for detecting positively selected amino acid sites. It has been reported that the parsimony method is generally conservative. In contrast, the Bayesian method is known to identify more positively selected sites than the parsimony method, especially when the number of sequences analyzed is small, although the interpretation of results obtained from...
Gene duplication is considered an important evolutionary mechanism leading to new gene functions. According to the classical model, one gene copy arising from gene duplication retains the ancestral function, whilst the other becomes subject to directional selection for some novel functions. Hence, according to this model, long-term persistence of two paralogous genes is possible only with the acquisition...
The TTL.6 gene is a member of the tubulin-tyrosine ligase (TTL) family involved in apoptosis and preferentially expressed in the testis. We sequenced the coding region and part of the introns of TTL.6 in world wide human populations and five representative nonhuman primate species covering great apes, lesser ape and Old World monkey. The sequence substitution patterns of TTL.6 in primates demonstrated...
Poliovirus is the etiological agent of poliomyelitis. From the observations that only simians are susceptible to poliovirus infection and that 37 amino acid sites (the poliovirus-binding associated [PBA] sites) in the domain D1 of CD155 are involved in the binding to poliovirus, it is considered that the susceptibility to poliovirus infection evolved through amino acid substitutions that occurred...
Primary microcephaly is a developmental defect of the brain characterized by severely reduced brain size but an absence of other overt abnormalities. Mutations in several loci have been linked to primary microcephaly. The underlying genes for two of these were recently identified as CDK5RAP2 and CENPJ. Here, we focus on CDK5RAP2 and show that the protein evolutionary rate of this gene is significantly...
BSP proteins represent three major proteins of bovine seminal plasma: BSP-A1/-A2, -A3 and -30 kDa. The BSP protein signature is characterized by two tandemly repeated fibronectin type 2 (Fn2) domains. Although classical affinity chromatography and protein sequencing have proven that the BSP protein homologs may be ubiquitous in mammals and functionally related to sperm capacitation, only the three...
Prolactin-induced protein (PIP) is a small protein secreted into the fluid in several glands. We determined the PIP coding sequences of 5 hominoid species and estimated the numbers of synonymous and nonsynonymous substitutions for each branch of the mammalian PIP gene tree. The branch connecting hominoids and Old World monkeys showed significantly higher nonsynonymous than synonymous substitutions...
Amino acid substitutions in the S gene of hepatitis B virus (HBV), especially in the ‘a’ determinant region, have been suggested to affect the antigenicity of the virus and the clinical outcome of the infected patient. However, no convincing evidence has been presented for this hypothesis, partly because the 3D structure of the S protein has not been determined. Comparative analysis of viral genes...
To detect positive selection in protein-coding sequence evolution, the ratio of the nonsynonymous to synonymous substitution rate (K A /K S ) is commonly used. When this ratio is higher than 1, positive selection on nonsynonymous changes is considered to have occurred. However, the question of what kinds of amino acid change are likely to be involved in positive selection has not been...
Cytochromes P450 (CYPs) comprise a superfamily of enzymes involved in various physiological functions, including the metabolism of drugs and carcinogenic compounds present in food, making them of great importance for human health. The possibility that CYPs could be broadening or changing substrate specificity in accordance to the high diversity of xenobiotics compounds environmentally available suggests...
In a search for the lineage-specific evolution of pathways between human, chimpanzee, mouse, and rat, orthologous gene families were generated from genome sequences. For each family, a model-based ratio of nonsynonymous to synonymous nucleotide substitution rates was calculated. Where the free-ratio model of individual ratios on each branch was supported, these families were mapped to two databases...
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