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A chemical-distance-based test for positive Darwinian selection. (English) Zbl 1129.92318

Gascuel, Olivier (ed.) et al., Algorithms in bioinformatics. 1st international workshop, WABI 2001, Århus, Denmark, August 28–31, 2001. Proceedings. Berlin: Springer (ISBN 3-540-42516-0). Lect. Notes Comput. Sci. 2149, 142-155 (2001).
Summary: There are very few instances in which positive Darwinian selection has been convincingly demonstrated at the molecular level. In this study, we present a novel test for detecting positive selection at the amino-acid level. In this test, amino-acid replacements are characterized in terms of chemical distances, i.e., degrees of dissimilarity between the exchanged residues in a protein. The test identifies statistically significant deviations of the mean observed chemical distance from its expectation, either along a phylogenetic lineage or across a subtree. The mean observed distance is calculated as the average chemical distance over all possible ancestral sequence reconstructions, weighted by their likelihood. Our method substantially improves over previous approaches by taking into account the stochastic process, tree phylogeny, among site rate variation, and alternative ancestral reconstructions. We provide a linear time algorithm for applying this test to all branches and all subtrees of a given phylogenetic tree. We validate this approach by applying it to two well-studied datasets, the MHC class I glycoproteins serving as a positive control, and the house-keeping gene carbonic anhydrase I serving as a negative control.
For the entire collection see [Zbl 0972.68682].

MSC:

92D15 Problems related to evolution
92C40 Biochemistry, molecular biology
62P10 Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis
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