Why Does a Protein’s Evolutionary Rate Vary over Time?
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] D. Lipman,et al. Relative Contributions of Intrinsic Structural–Functional Constraints and Translation Rate to the Evolution of Protein-Coding Genes , 2010, Genome biology and evolution.
[2] Claus O. Wilke,et al. Mistranslation-Induced Protein Misfolding as a Dominant Constraint on Coding-Sequence Evolution , 2008, Cell.
[3] D. M. Krylov,et al. Gene loss, protein sequence divergence, gene dispensability, expression level, and interactivity are correlated in eukaryotic evolution. , 2003, Genome research.
[4] Tomoko Ohta,et al. The neutral theory is dead. The current significance and standing of neutral and nearly neutral theories , 1996 .
[5] R. Aebersold,et al. Comparative Functional Analysis of the Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster Proteomes , 2009, PLoS biology.
[6] N. Takahata,et al. On the overdispersed molecular clock. , 1987, Genetics.
[7] Tatiana Tatusova,et al. NCBI Reference Sequence (RefSeq): a curated non-redundant sequence database of genomes, transcripts and proteins , 2004, Nucleic Acids Res..
[8] David N. Messina,et al. Evolutionary and Biomedical Insights from the Rhesus Macaque Genome , 2007, Science.
[9] Jian Wang,et al. Genome sequencing and comparison of two nonhuman primate animal models, the cynomolgus and Chinese rhesus macaques , 2011, Nature Biotechnology.
[10] T. Ohta,et al. On the constancy of the evolutionary rate of cistrons , 2005, Journal of Molecular Evolution.
[11] Alexander Souvorov,et al. Splign: algorithms for computing spliced alignments with identification of paralogs , 2008, Biology Direct.
[12] J H Gillespie,et al. Lineage effects and the index of dispersion of molecular evolution. , 1989, Molecular biology and evolution.
[13] Ziheng Yang,et al. PAML: a program package for phylogenetic analysis by maximum likelihood , 1997, Comput. Appl. Biosci..
[14] Eugene V Koonin,et al. The universal distribution of evolutionary rates of genes and distinct characteristics of eukaryotic genes of different apparent ages , 2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[15] Charles H. Langley,et al. An examination of the constancy of the rate of molecular evolution , 2005, Journal of Molecular Evolution.
[16] Robert C. Edgar,et al. MUSCLE: multiple sequence alignment with high accuracy and high throughput. , 2004, Nucleic acids research.
[17] C. Wilke,et al. Thermodynamics of Neutral Protein Evolution , 2006, Genetics.
[18] Gregory D. Schuler,et al. Database resources of the National Center for Biotechnology Information: update , 2004, Nucleic acids research.
[19] M. Kreitman,et al. The neutral theory is dead. Long live the neutral theory. , 1996, BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology.
[20] C. Wilke,et al. A single determinant dominates the rate of yeast protein evolution. , 2006, Molecular biology and evolution.
[21] Eduardo P C Rocha,et al. An analysis of determinants of amino acids substitution rates in bacterial proteins. , 2004, Molecular biology and evolution.
[22] Melanie A. Huntley,et al. Evolution of genes and genomes on the Drosophila phylogeny , 2007, Nature.
[23] C. Pál,et al. Highly expressed genes in yeast evolve slowly. , 2001, Genetics.
[24] Narmada Thanki,et al. CDD: a Conserved Domain Database for the functional annotation of proteins , 2010, Nucleic Acids Res..
[25] D. Lipman,et al. A genomic perspective on protein families. , 1997, Science.
[26] J. L. Cherry,et al. Should we expect substitution rate to depend on population size? , 1998, Genetics.
[27] J. Gillespie. The causes of molecular evolution , 1991 .
[28] Trevor Bedford,et al. Overdispersion of the Molecular Clock Varies Between Yeast, Drosophila and Mammals , 2008, Genetics.
[29] J. Dow,et al. Using FlyAtlas to identify better Drosophila melanogaster models of human disease , 2007, Nature Genetics.
[30] Trevor Bedford,et al. Overdispersion of the molecular clock: temporal variation of gene-specific substitution rates in Drosophila. , 2008, Molecular biology and evolution.