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Originally published in Science Express on 1 September 2005 Science 16 September 2005: Vol. 309. no. 5742, pp. 1850 - 1854
DOI: 10.1126/science.1108296
Parallel Patterns of Evolution in the Genomes and Transcriptomes of Humans and Chimpanzees
Philipp Khaitovich,1*Ines Hellmann,1*Wolfgang Enard,1*Katja Nowick,1Marcus Leinweber,1Henriette Franz,1Gunter Weiss,2Michael Lachmann,1Svante Pääbo1
The determination of the chimpanzee genome sequence providesa means to study both structural and functional aspects of theevolution of the human genome. Here we compare humans and chimpanzeeswith respect to differences in expression levels and protein-codingsequences for genes active in brain, heart, liver, kidney, andtestis. We find that the patterns of differences in gene expressionand gene sequences are markedly similar. In particular, thereis a gradation of selective constraints among the tissues sothat the brain shows the least differences between the specieswhereas liver shows the most. Furthermore, expression levelsas well as amino acid sequences of genes active in more tissueshave diverged less between the species than have genes activein fewer tissues. In general, these patterns are consistentwith a model of neutral evolution with negative selection. However,for X-chromosomal genes expressed in testis, patterns suggestiveof positive selection on sequence changes as well as expressionchanges are seen. Furthermore, although genes expressed in thebrain have changed less than have genes expressed in other tissues,in agreement with previous work we find that genes active inbrain have accumulated more changes on the human than on thechimpanzee lineage.
1 Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany. 2 WE Informatik, Bioinformatik, University of Düsseldorf, Universitätsstrasse 1, D-40225 Düsseldorf, Germany.
Published online 1 September 2005;
Include this information when citing this paper.
* These authors contributed equally to this work.
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: paabo{at}eva.mpg.de
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