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Incipient de novo genes can evolve from frozen accidents that escaped rapid transcript turnover

Abstract

A recent surge of studies have suggested that many novel genes arise de novo from previously noncoding DNA and not by duplication. However, most studies concentrated on longer evolutionary time scales and rarely considered protein structural properties. Therefore, it remains unclear how these properties are shaped by evolution, depend on genetic mechanisms and influence gene survival. Here we compare open reading frames (ORFs) from high coverage transcriptomes from mouse and another four mammals covering 160 million years of evolution. We find that novel ORFs pervasively emerge from noncoding regions but are rapidly lost again, while relatively fewer arise from the divergence of coding sequences but are retained much longer. We also find that a subset (14%) of the mouse-specific ORFs bind ribosomes and are potentially translated, showing that such ORFs can be the starting points of gene emergence. Surprisingly, disorder and other protein properties of young ORFs hardly change with gene age in short time frames. Only length and nucleotide composition change significantly. Thus, some transcribed de novo genes resemble ‘frozen accidents’ of randomly emerged ORFs that survived initial purging. This perspective complies with very recent studies indicating that some neutrally evolving transcripts containing random protein sequences may be translated and be viable starting points of de novo gene emergence.

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Fig. 1: ORF annotation status varies with ORF age.
Fig. 2: Comparison of ORF sequence properties across age classes.
Fig. 3: Comparison of mouse-specific ORF sequences to randomly generated sequences.

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Data availability

The datasets used and/or analysed during the current study are available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.6225563.v1.

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Acknowledgements

J.F.S. was supported by an HFSP grant to E.B.-B. We thank D. Tautz and R. Neme for input into the initial study design and A. Lange for valuable feedback on the manuscript.

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All authors conceived the study. J.F.S. performed the analyses. All authors analysed the data. J.F.S. and E.B.-B. wrote the paper. All authors read, finalized and approved the final manuscript.

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Correspondence to Erich Bornberg-Bauer.

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Schmitz, J.F., Ullrich, K.K. & Bornberg-Bauer, E. Incipient de novo genes can evolve from frozen accidents that escaped rapid transcript turnover. Nat Ecol Evol 2, 1626–1632 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-018-0639-7

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