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Complex Evolution of the Mismatch Repair System in Eukaryotes is Illuminated by Novel Archaeal Genomes

Paulo G. Hofstatter, Daniel J. G. Lahr

2021Journal of Molecular Evolution15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Repairing DNA damage is one of the most important functions of the 'housekeeping' proteins, as DNA molecules are constantly subject to different kinds of damage. An important mechanism of DNA repair is the mismatch repair system (MMR). In eukaryotes, it is more complex than it is in bacteria or Archaea due to an inflated number of paralogues produced as a result of an extensive process of gene duplication and further specialization upon the evolution of the first eukaryotes, including an important part of the meiotic machinery. Recently, the discovery and sequencing of Asgard Archaea allowed us to revisit the MMR system evolution with the addition of new data from a group that is closely related to the eukaryotic ancestor. This new analysis provided evidence for a complex evolutionary history of eukaryotic MMR: an archaeal origin for the nuclear MMR system in eukaryotes, with subsequent acquisitions of other MMR systems from organelles.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyArchaeaEvolutionary biologyGeneticsGene duplicationGenomeHousekeeping geneDNA repairGeneComputational biologyGene expressionDNA Repair MechanismsGenetic factors in colorectal cancerRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms
Complex Evolution of the Mismatch Repair System in Eukaryotes is Illuminated by Novel Archaeal Genomes | Litcius