cshlp | At least since the publication of Susumu Ohno's Evolution by Gene Duplication (Ohno 1970),
the conventional wisdom has been that, in the emergence of novel genes,
“natural selection merely modified, while redundancy
created.” In other words, new genes generally arise by
the duplication of existing genes. While the notion that duplication
plays a prominent role in the emergence of novel genes
is perhaps most famously associated with Ohno, it actually traces back
to the early days of the modern evolutionary synthesis
(Bridges 1935; Muller 1936). Decades of modern sequence-based research have largely supported this general view (Graur and Li 2000).
In recent years, the classic model of whole gene duplication and
subsequent divergence has been enlarged to include phenomena
such as exon shuffling, gene fusion and fission,
retrotransposition, and lateral gene transfer (for review, see Long et al. 2003).
Nevertheless, despite their additional complexity, these mechanisms
remain essentially duplicative, in the sense that sequences
encoding one or more protein-coding genes are copied,
by one mechanism or another, and used as the starting point for a new
gene sequence. (An exception is the exonization of
noncoding transposable elements, such as Alus, but this process tends to generate individual exons rather than entire genes;Makalowski et al. 1994; Nekrutenko and Li 2001.)
By contrast, the origination of protein-coding genes de novo from
nonrepetitive, noncoding DNA has been thought to occur
only as an exceptionally rare event during evolution.
Indeed, the emergence of complete, functional genes—with promoters,
open reading frames (ORFs), and functional
proteins—from “junk” DNA would seem highly improbable, almost like the
elusive
transmutation of lead into gold that was sought by
medieval alchemists.
Over the past few years, this view has begun to change, with several reports of de novo gene origins in Drosophila and yeast (Levine et al. 2006; Begun et al. 2007; Chen et al. 2007; Cai et al. 2008). Zhou et al. (2008) have estimated that as many as ∼12% of newly emerged genes in the Drosophila melanogaster subgroup may have arisen de novo from noncoding DNA, independently of transposable elements. Recently, Toll-Riera et al. (2009) identified 15 such genes in primates. Now, in this issue, Knowles and McLysaght (2009)
demonstrate for the first time that human genes have arisen de novo
from noncoding DNA since the divergence of the human
and chimpanzee genomes. They identify and analyze
three human genes that have no known homologs, in the human genome or
any
other, and do not appear to derive from transposable
elements. Rather, these are cases in which mutation, natural selection,
and/or neutral drift have evidently forged ORFs and
functional promoters out of raw genomic DNA, like a blacksmith shaping
a new tool from raw iron.
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