Vol 13, Issue 2, 238-243, February 2003
LETTER
Coexpression of Neighboring Genes in Caenorhabditis Elegans Is Mostly Due to Operons and Duplicate Genes
Martin J. Lercher1,3,
Thomas Blumenthal2 and
Laurence D. Hurst1
1Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of
Bath, Bath BA2 7AY, UK; 2Department of Biochemistry and
Molecular Genetics, University of Colorado School of Medicine,
Denver, Colorado 80262, USA
In many eukaryotic species, gene order is not random. In humans,
flies, and yeast, there is clustering of coexpressed genes that cannot
be explained as a trivial consequence of tandem duplication. In the
worm genome this is taken a step further with many genes being
organized into operons. Here we analyze the relationship between gene
location and expression in Caenorhabditis elegans and find
evidence for at least three different processes resulting in local
expression similarity. Not surprisingly, the strongest effect comes
from genes organized in operons. However, coexpression within operons
is not perfect, and is influenced by some distance-dependent
regulation. Beyond operons, there is a relationship between physical
distance, expression similarity, and sequence similarity, acting over
several megabases. This is consistent with a model of tandem
duplicate genes diverging over time in sequence and expression pattern,
while moving apart owing to chromosomal rearrangements. However, at a
very local level, nonduplicate genes on opposite strands (hence not in
operons) show similar expression patterns. This suggests that such
genes may share regulatory elements or be regulated at the level of
chromatin structure. The central importance of tandem duplicate genes
in these patterns renders the worm genome different from both yeast and
human.
[Supplemental material is available online at http://www.genome.org.]
3 Corresponding author.
E-MAIL M.J.Lercher{at}bath.ac.uk; FAX 44-1225-386779.
Article and publication are at
http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.553803.

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