genome size and complexity (as told by michael lynch)

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Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

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Page 1: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Genome size and Complexity

(as told by Michael Lynch)

Page 2: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Genome size and complexity varies across the tree of life

Lynch 2007

Page 3: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Some Big Questions

• What is the relationship between genomic and organismal size/complexity?

• Are genome size changes adaptive, or passively acquired?

• How do these changes occur mechanistically?

• How do study all this?

Page 4: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Proximal mechanisms of genomic expansion/contraction

• Mobile element proliferation• Segmental duplications• Strand slippage• DS DNA breaks

– Insertion propagation (biased gene conversion)– Microdeletions (nonhomologous end repair)

• Unequal crossing over• Illegitimate recombination• Selection for or against such modifications

Page 5: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Explaining variation in genome size

• Adaptive, neutral, deleterious

• Selfish DNA hypothesis• Bulk DNA hypothesis• Metabolic cost of DNA• Petrov neutral hypothesis• Mutation Hazard Hypothesis

Page 6: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Lynch and Conery 2003: “Mutation Hazard” Hypothesis

1• Body size / complexity increase

2• Reduced Ne

3• Reduced efficacy of selection

4

• Non-coding DNA proliferates • duplicate genes retained

Increases in genome size and complexity are a drift-driven consequence of reducing efficacy of selection

Page 7: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Lynch and Conery 2003

Neu scales inversely with genome size

Page 8: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Lynch and Conery 2003

Half life of duplicate genes greater in larger genomes

Page 9: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Intron number and size greater in larger genomes

Lynch and Conery 2003

Threshold effect

Page 10: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

TE size/number scales with genome size; threshold effect

Page 11: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Whitney and Garland, 2010

Page 12: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Whitney and Garland, 2010

Page 13: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Whitney and Garland, 2010

Conclusion: no mechanistic connection between Ne and genome complexitySubtext: Adaptive processes account for variations in genome size?

Page 14: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)
Page 15: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Lynch 2011 rebuttal

• Neu has no shared evolutionary history– Comparative methods inappropriate

• Topology and branch lengths of phylogeny is suspect

• Threshold effect is most important prediction of MH; not addressed in W&G

• OLS is unbiased

Page 16: Genome size and Complexity (as told by Michael Lynch)

Whitney et al. counterpoints

• Significant phylogenetic signal (K) for all traits examined (genome size, etc)

• Life history and other factors underlying Neu can and do have phylogenetic signal

• Consistent results with different phylogenies

• Too few data to conduct threshold tests• OLS clearly biased