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Publication : Null mutations in human and mouse orthologs frequently result in different phenotypes.

First Author  Liao BY Year  2008
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  105
Issue  19 Pages  6987-92
PubMed ID  18458337 Mgi Jnum  J:134883
Mgi Id  MGI:3790009 Doi  10.1073/pnas.0800387105
Citation  Liao BY, et al. (2008) Null mutations in human and mouse orthologs frequently result in different phenotypes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 105(19):6987-92
abstractText  One-to-one orthologous genes of relatively closely related species are widely assumed to have similar functions and cause similar phenotypes when deleted from the genome. Although this assumption is the foundation of comparative genomics and the basis for the use of model organisms to study human biology and disease, its validity is known only from anecdotes rather than from systematic examination. Comparing documented phenotypes of null mutations in humans and mice, we find that >20% of human essential genes have nonessential mouse orthologs. These changes of gene essentiality appear to be associated with adaptive evolution at the protein-sequence, but not gene-expression, level. Proteins localized to the vacuole, a cellular compartment for waste management, are highly enriched among essentiality-changing genes. It is probable that the evolution of the prolonged life history in humans required enhanced waste management for proper cellular function until the time of reproduction, which rendered these vacuole proteins essential and generated selective pressures for their improvement. If our gene sample represents the entire genome, our results would mean frequent changes of phenotypic effects of one-to-one orthologous genes even between relatively closely related species, a possibility that should be considered in comparative genomic studies and in making cross-species inferences of gene function and phenotypic effect.
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