About Entrez
NCBI Toolbar
Text Version
Entrez PubMed
Overview
Help |
FAQ
Tutorials
New/Noteworthy
E-Utilities
PubMed Services
Journals Database
MeSH Database
Single Citation Matcher
Batch Citation Matcher
Clinical Queries
Special Queries
LinkOut
My NCBI
Related Resources
Order Documents
NLM Mobile
NLM Catalog
NLM Gateway
TOXNET
Consumer Health
Clinical Alerts
ClinicalTrials.gov
PubMed Central
|
 |
| Display Show |
 |
 |
|
Selective pressures on the olfactory receptor repertoire since the human-chimpanzee divergence.
Gimelbrant AA, Skaletsky H, Chess A.
Whitehead Institute, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA.
The availability of the sequence of the chimpanzee genome provides an opportunity to examine human genes and their chimpanzee orthologs and to analyze selective pressures that have been shaping the olfactory receptor repertoire since the human-chimpanzee divergence. We determined the ratio of nonsynonymous to synonymous changes for each of 186 orthologous pairs and then examined how the distribution of these ratios compares with the distribution expected under neutral drift. Consistent with the diminishing importance of olfaction for these species, we find no evidence for positive selection and we find evidence of weak purifying selection affecting over half of the repertoire.
PMID: 15178761 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
| Display Show |
 |
|