Network-level molecular evolutionary analysis of the insulin/TOR signal transduction pathway across 12 Drosophila genomes

  1. David Alvarez-Ponce,
  2. Montserrat Aguadé and
  3. Julio Rozas1
  1. Departament de Genètica, Facultat de Biologia, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona 08028, Spain

    Abstract

    Biological function is based on complex networks consisting of large numbers of interacting molecules. The evolutionary properties of molecular networks and, in particular, the impact of network architecture on the sequence evolution of its individual components are, nonetheless, still poorly understood. Here, we conducted a fine-scale network-level molecular evolutionary analysis of the insulin/TOR pathway across 12 species of Drosophila. We found that the insulin/TOR pathway components are completely conserved across these species and that two genes located at major network branch points show evidence for positive selection. Remarkably, we detected a gradient in the strength of purifying selection along the pathway, increasing from the upstream to the downstream genes. We also found that physically interacting proteins tend to have more similar levels of selective constraint, even though this feature might represent a byproduct of the correlation between selective constraint and the pathway position. Our results clearly indicate that the levels of functional constraint do depend on the position of the proteins in the pathway and, consequently, the architecture of the pathway constrains gene sequence evolution.

    Footnotes

    • 1 Corresponding author.

      E-mail jrozas{at}ub.edu; fax 34-93-4034420.

    • [Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org.]

    • Article published online before print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.084038.108.

      • Received July 31, 2008.
      • Accepted November 20, 2008.
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