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. 2008 Nov;4(11):e1000281.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1000281. Epub 2008 Nov 28.

Hypermutable non-synonymous sites are under stronger negative selection

Affiliations

Hypermutable non-synonymous sites are under stronger negative selection

Steffen Schmidt et al. PLoS Genet. 2008 Nov.

Erratum in

  • Erratum.
    Schmidt S, Gerasimova A, Kondrashov FA, Adzhubei IA, Kondrashov AS, Sunyaev S. Schmidt S, et al. PLoS Genet. 2008 Dec;4(12):10.1371/annotation/a81b1fab-890c-447b-a308-5bc8ca3eb21d. doi: 10.1371/annotation/a81b1fab-890c-447b-a308-5bc8ca3eb21d. Epub 2008 Dec 10. PLoS Genet. 2008. PMID: 19096535 Free PMC article.

Abstract

Mutation rate varies greatly between nucleotide sites of the human genome and depends both on the global genomic location and the local sequence context of a site. In particular, CpG context elevates the mutation rate by an order of magnitude. Mutations also vary widely in their effect on the molecular function, phenotype, and fitness. Independence of the probability of occurrence of a new mutation's effect has been a fundamental premise in genetics. However, highly mutable contexts may be preserved by negative selection at important sites but destroyed by mutation at sites under no selection. Thus, there may be a positive correlation between the rate of mutations at a nucleotide site and the magnitude of their effect on fitness. We studied the impact of CpG context on the rate of human-chimpanzee divergence and on intrahuman nucleotide diversity at non-synonymous coding sites. We compared nucleotides that occupy identical positions within codons of identical amino acids and only differ by being within versus outside CpG context. Nucleotides within CpG context are under a stronger negative selection, as revealed by their lower, proportionally to the mutation rate, rate of evolution and nucleotide diversity. In particular, the probability of fixation of a non-synonymous transition at a CpG site is two times lower than at a CpG site. Thus, sites with different mutation rates are not necessarily selectively equivalent. This suggests that the mutation rate may complement sequence conservation as a characteristic predictive of functional importance of nucleotide sites.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. CpG impact on transitions in amino acid changes.
The effect on human-chimpanzee divergence is shown in blue; the effect on non-synonymous SNPs in human in red.

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