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Systematic Analysis of Head-to-Head Gene Organization: Evolutionary Conservation and Potential Biological Relevance

Several “head-to-head” (or “bidirectional”) gene pairs have been studied in individual experiments, but genome-wide analysis of this gene organization, especially in terms of transcriptional correlation and functional association, is still insufficient. We conducted a systematic investigation of hea...

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Autores principales: Li, Yuan-Yuan, Yu, Hui, Guo, Zong-Ming, Guo, Ting-Qing, Tu, Kang, Li, Yi-Xue
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1487180/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16839196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0020074
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author Li, Yuan-Yuan
Yu, Hui
Guo, Zong-Ming
Guo, Ting-Qing
Tu, Kang
Li, Yi-Xue
author_facet Li, Yuan-Yuan
Yu, Hui
Guo, Zong-Ming
Guo, Ting-Qing
Tu, Kang
Li, Yi-Xue
author_sort Li, Yuan-Yuan
collection PubMed
description Several “head-to-head” (or “bidirectional”) gene pairs have been studied in individual experiments, but genome-wide analysis of this gene organization, especially in terms of transcriptional correlation and functional association, is still insufficient. We conducted a systematic investigation of head-to-head gene organization focusing on structural features, evolutionary conservation, expression correlation and functional association. Of the present 1,262, 1,071, and 491 head-to-head pairs identified in human, mouse, and rat genomes, respectively, pairs with 1– to 400–base pair distance between transcription start sites form the majority (62.36%, 64.15%, and 55.19% for human, mouse, and rat, respectively) of each dataset, and the largest group is always the one with a transcription start site distance of 101 to 200 base pairs. The phylogenetic analysis among Fugu, chicken, and human indicates a negative selection on the separation of head-to-head genes across vertebrate evolution, and thus the ancestral existence of this gene organization. The expression analysis shows that most of the human head-to-head genes are significantly correlated, and the correlation could be positive, negative, or alternative depending on the experimental conditions. Finally, head-to-head genes statistically tend to perform similar functions, and gene pairs associated with the significant cofunctions seem to have stronger expression correlations. The findings indicate that the head-to-head gene organization is ancient and conserved, which subjects functionally related genes to correlated transcriptional regulation and thus provides an exquisite mechanism of transcriptional regulation based on gene organization. These results have significantly expanded the knowledge about head-to-head gene organization. Supplementary materials for this study are available at http://www.scbit.org/h2h.
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spelling pubmed-14871802006-07-07 Systematic Analysis of Head-to-Head Gene Organization: Evolutionary Conservation and Potential Biological Relevance Li, Yuan-Yuan Yu, Hui Guo, Zong-Ming Guo, Ting-Qing Tu, Kang Li, Yi-Xue PLoS Comput Biol Research Article Several “head-to-head” (or “bidirectional”) gene pairs have been studied in individual experiments, but genome-wide analysis of this gene organization, especially in terms of transcriptional correlation and functional association, is still insufficient. We conducted a systematic investigation of head-to-head gene organization focusing on structural features, evolutionary conservation, expression correlation and functional association. Of the present 1,262, 1,071, and 491 head-to-head pairs identified in human, mouse, and rat genomes, respectively, pairs with 1– to 400–base pair distance between transcription start sites form the majority (62.36%, 64.15%, and 55.19% for human, mouse, and rat, respectively) of each dataset, and the largest group is always the one with a transcription start site distance of 101 to 200 base pairs. The phylogenetic analysis among Fugu, chicken, and human indicates a negative selection on the separation of head-to-head genes across vertebrate evolution, and thus the ancestral existence of this gene organization. The expression analysis shows that most of the human head-to-head genes are significantly correlated, and the correlation could be positive, negative, or alternative depending on the experimental conditions. Finally, head-to-head genes statistically tend to perform similar functions, and gene pairs associated with the significant cofunctions seem to have stronger expression correlations. The findings indicate that the head-to-head gene organization is ancient and conserved, which subjects functionally related genes to correlated transcriptional regulation and thus provides an exquisite mechanism of transcriptional regulation based on gene organization. These results have significantly expanded the knowledge about head-to-head gene organization. Supplementary materials for this study are available at http://www.scbit.org/h2h. Public Library of Science 2006-07 2006-07-07 /pmc/articles/PMC1487180/ /pubmed/16839196 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0020074 Text en © 2006 Li et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Li, Yuan-Yuan
Yu, Hui
Guo, Zong-Ming
Guo, Ting-Qing
Tu, Kang
Li, Yi-Xue
Systematic Analysis of Head-to-Head Gene Organization: Evolutionary Conservation and Potential Biological Relevance
title Systematic Analysis of Head-to-Head Gene Organization: Evolutionary Conservation and Potential Biological Relevance
title_full Systematic Analysis of Head-to-Head Gene Organization: Evolutionary Conservation and Potential Biological Relevance
title_fullStr Systematic Analysis of Head-to-Head Gene Organization: Evolutionary Conservation and Potential Biological Relevance
title_full_unstemmed Systematic Analysis of Head-to-Head Gene Organization: Evolutionary Conservation and Potential Biological Relevance
title_short Systematic Analysis of Head-to-Head Gene Organization: Evolutionary Conservation and Potential Biological Relevance
title_sort systematic analysis of head-to-head gene organization: evolutionary conservation and potential biological relevance
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1487180/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16839196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0020074
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