Published online before print
February 14, 2005, 10.1101/gr.3308405
Genome Res. 15:364-368, 2005
©2005 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; ISSN 1088-9051/05 $5.00
Letter
Naturally occurring antisense: Transcriptional leakage or real overlap?
Dvir Dahary1,2,3,
Orna Elroy-Stein2 and
Rotem Sorek1
1 Compugen Ltd., Tel Aviv 69512 Israel
2 Department of Cell Research & Immunology, George S. Wise Faculty of Life Science, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel
Naturally occurring antisense transcription is associated with the regulation of gene expression through a variety of biological mechanisms. Several recent genome-wide studies reported the identification of potential antisense transcripts for thousands of mammalian genes, many of them resulting from alternatively polyadenylated transcripts or heterogeneous transcription start sites. However, it is not clear whether this transcriptional plasticity is intentional, leading to regulated overlap between the transcripts, or, alternatively, represents a "leakage" of the RNA transcription machinery. To address this question through an evolutionary approach, we compared the genomic organization of genes, with or without antisense, between human, mouse, and the pufferfish Fugu rubripes. Our hypothesis was that if two neighboring genes overlap and have a sense-antisense relationship, we would expect negative selection acting on the evolutionary separation between them. We found that antisense gene pairs are twice as likely to preserve their genomic organization throughout vertebrates' evolution compared to nonantisense pairs, implying an overlap existence in the ancestral genome. In addition, we show that increasing the genomic distance between pairs of genes having a sense-antisense relationship is selected against. These findings indicate that, at least in part, the abundance of antisense transcripts observed in expressed data represents real overlap rather than transcriptional leakage. Moreover, our results imply that natural antisense transcription has considerably affected vertebrate genome evolution.
3 Corresponding author. E-mail dvir{at}compugen.co.il; fax 972-3-765-8555.
[Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org.]
Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.3308405. Article published online ahead of print in February 2005.

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