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SCIENCE AT THE EDGE SEMINAR

QB/GEDD

Friday, January 11 at 11:30am

Room 1400 Biomedical and Physical Sciences Bldg.

Refreshments at 11:15

David Liberles

Department of Molecular Biology

 University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY

 

 

Computational Approaches for Linking Comparative Genomics to Biochemistry and Evolution

 

 

Standard bioinformatics pipelines for the comparative genomic data analysis of protein-encoding gene families typically include steps like multiple sequence alignment, phylogenetic tree reconstruction, calculation of the ratio of rates of nonsynonymous to synonymous nucleotide substitution (dN/dS), and gene tree-species tree reconciliation. Models for amino acid substitution used in these processes assume that each site evolves independently according to average properties in the absence of a protein structural or functional context. Models for duplicate gene retention assume that the process is evolutionarily neutral and do not consider functional or mechanistic underpinnings. A model for duplicate gene retention that would allow for mechanistic differentiation between nonfunctionalization, neofunctionalization, subfunctionalization, and dosage balance based upon differences in expected time-dependent retention profiles is presented. Two characterizations of amino acid substitution are also presented. One approach extends a population genetic model to inter-specific genomic data and a second approach evaluates the effects of selection for protein folding and protein-protein interaction on sequence evolution.  These approaches reflect an in progress strategy for increasing biochemical and evolutionary realism in bioinformatics.

 

 

Helen Geiger, Administrative Assistant

Quantitative Biology Graduate Program and

Gene Expression in Development and Disease

Biochemistry

603 Wilson Road, Room 212

East Lansing, MI   48824

Email: [log in to unmask]

Phone:  517-432-9895

QB Website: http://www.qbi.msu.edu/

GEDD Website: http://www.gedd.msu.edu/