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Protein trees and orthologies

Overview

The gene orthology and paralogy predictions are generated by a pipeline where maximum likelihood phylogenetic gene trees (generated by TreeBeST5) play a central role. They aim to represent the evolutionary history of gene families, i.e. genes that diverged from a common ancestor. These gene trees reconciled with their species tree have their internal nodes annotated to distinguish duplication or speciation events.

This methodology was published in EnsemblCompara GeneTrees: Analysis of complete, duplication aware phylogenetic trees in vertebrates. Vilella AJ, Severin J, Ureta-Vidal A, Durbin R, Heng L, Birney E. Genome Research 2008 Nov 4. Please cite this publication if you use the homologies from Ensembl. However, be aware that the pipeline has evolved since the publication, and this HTML document is the up-to-date documentation.

There is a clear concordance with reciprocal best approaches in the simple case of unique orthologous genes. However, the gene tree pipeline is able to find more complex one-to-many and many-to-many relations. This, for instance, significantly raises the number of Teleost (bony fish) to Mammal orthologs and has even more dramatic effects on Fly/Mammal or Worm/Mammal orthologous gene predictions. Using this approach, we are also able to "time" duplication events which produce paralogs by identifying the most recent common ancestor (i.e. taxonomy level) for a given internal node of the tree.

The gene orthology and paralogy prediction pipeline has 9 basic steps:

  1. Load a representative translation of each gene from all species used in Ensembl. We currently choose the longest translation annotated by the CCDS project, if any, or the longest protein-coding translation otherwise.
  2. run NCBI Blast+1 (refined with SmithWaterman) on every gene against every other (both self and non-self species) in a genome-wise manner
  3. Build a sparse graph of gene relations based on Blast e-values and generate clusters using hcluster_sg2. Hcluster_sg has a little insight about the phylogeny of the species (namely: a list of outgroup species), which helps defining pertinent clusters for the ingroup species
  4. The largest clusters (more than 400 genes) are split using QuickTree7
  5. For each cluster, build a multiple alignment based on the protein sequences using:
    • either a combination of multiple aligners, consensified by M-Coffee3
    • or Mafft4 when the cluster is too large, or MCoffee is too long
  6. For each aligned cluster, build a phylogenetic tree using TreeBeST5 using the CDS back-translation of the protein multiple alignment from the original DNA sequences. A rooted tree with internal duplication tags is obtained at this stage, reconciling it against a species tree inferred from the NCBI taxonomy
  7. From each gene tree, infer gene pairwise relations of orthology and paralogy types.
  8. A stable ID is assigned to each GeneTree. Please refer to the Family and GeneTree stable ID page for more info.

Clustering

hcluster_sg2 performs hierarchical clustering under mean distance. It reads an input file that describes the similarity between two sequences, and groups two nearest nodes at each step. When two nodes are joined, the distance between the joined node and all the other nodes are updated by mean distance. This procedure is iterated until one of the three rules is met:

  1. Do not merge cluster A and B if the total number of edges between A and B is smaller than |A|*|B|/3, where |A| and |B| are the sizes of A and B, respectively. This rule guarantees each cluster is compact.
  2. Do not join A to any other cluster if |A| < 500. This rule avoids huge clusters which may cause computational burden for multiple alignment and tree building as well.
  3. Do not join A and B if both A and B contain plant genes or both A and B contain Fungi genes. This rule tries to find animal gene families. TreeFam clustering is done with outgroups.

Hcluster_sg also introduces an additional edge breaking rule: removes an edge between cluster A and B if the number of edges between A and B is smaller than |A|*|B|/10. This heuristic rule removes weak relations which are quite unlikely to be joined at a later step.

As the pipeline has to complete in time for the Ensembl releases, we limit the size of the clusters to 400 genes. For larger clusters, we run Mafft4 and QuickTree7. QuickTree is a very fast and efficient to build an unrooted phylogenetic tree. We then find the branch that best splits the cluster into two halves. We recursively follow this approach until each sub-cluster is smaller than 400 genes.

Tree building

The CDS back-translated protein alignment (i.e., codon alignment) is used to build 5 different trees (within TreeBeST5):

  1. a maximum likelihood (ML) tree built, based on the protein alignment with the WAG model, which takes into the account the species tree
  2. a ML tree built using phyml, based on the codon alignment with the Hasegawa-Kishino-Yano (HKY) model, also taking into account the species tree
  3. a neighbour-joining (NJ) tree using p-distance, based on the codon alignment
  4. a NJ tree using dN distance, based on the codon alignment
  5. a NJ tree using dS distance, based on the codon alignment

For (1) and (2), TreeBeST uses a modified version of phyml release 2.4.5 which takes an input species tree, and tries to build a gene tree that is consistent with the topology of the species tree. This "species-guided" phyml uses the original phyml tree-search code. However, the objective function maximised during the tree-search is multiplied by an extra likelihood factor not found in the original phyml. This extra likelihood factor reflects the number of duplications and losses inferred in a gene tree, given the topology of the species tree. The species-guided phyml allows the gene tree to have a topology that is inconsistent with the species tree if the alignment strongly supports this. The species tree is based on the NCBI taxonomy tree (subject to some modifications depending on new datasets).

The final tree is made by merging the five trees into one consensus tree using the "tree merging" algorithm. This allows TreeBeST to take advantage of the fact that DNA-based trees often are more accurate for closely related parts of trees and protein-based trees for distant relationships, and that a group of algorithms may outperform others under certain scenarios. The algorithm simultaneously merges the five input trees into a consensus tree. The consensus topology contains clades found in any of the input trees, where the clades chosen are those that minimize the number of duplications and losses inferred, and have the highest bootstrap support. Branch lengths are estimated for the final consensus tree based on the DNA alignment, using phyml with the HKY model.

Homology types

Using the Gene Trees, we can infer the following pairwise relationships.

Orthologues

Any gene pairwise relation where the ancestor node is a speciation event. We predict several descriptions of orthologues:

  • 1-to-1 orthologues (ortholog_one2one)
  • 1-to-many orthologues (ortholog_one2many)
  • many-to-many orthologues (ortholog_many2many)
  • different-species paralogies —only as exceptions, see below — (reusing the three orthology types above)
Paralogues

Any gene pairwise relation where the ancestor node is a duplication event. We predict several descriptions of paralogues:

  • same-species paralogies (within_species_paralog)
  • across-tree paralogies (other_paralog)
  • fragments of the same ‐predicted‐ gene (gene_split)

tree_example1

Genes in different species and related by a speciation event are defined as orthologs. Depending on the number of genes found in each species, we differentiate among 1:1, 1:many and many:many relationships. Please, refer to the figure where there are examples of the three kinds.

Genes of the same species and related by a duplication event are defined as paralogs. In the previous figure, Hsap2 and Hsap2', and Mmus2 and Mmus2' are two examples of within-species-paralogs. The duplication event relating the paralogues does not need to affect this species only. For example, Mmus2' and Mmus3' are also within_species_paralog but the duplication event has occurred in the common ancestor between species Hsap (human) and species Mmus (mouse). The taxonomy level "times" the duplication event to the ancestor of Euarchontoglires.

When paralogous genes are too distant to be in the same gene tree, but can still be related as part of a broader "super-family", they are labelled as other_paralog relationships. This happens if they were part of the same cluster from hcluster_sg, but has been separated by QuickTree.

We compute a duplication confidence score for each duplication node as the Jaccard index of the sets of species under the two sub-trees. The score is sometimes refered as "species intersection score".
duplication_confidence_score.merged.41.png

A between_species_paralog corresponds to a relation between genes of different species where the ancestor node has been labelled as a duplication node e.g. Mmus1:Hsap2 or Mmus1:Hsap3. Currently, we do not annotate between_species_paralog, except in the following cases:

  • When the node in the gene-tree is labelled as dubious (i.e has a duplication confidence score of 0)
  • When there is no better match for any of the genes (regardless of the duplication confidence score)
  • When at least one gene does not have a better match, and the duplication is weakly-supported (duplication confidence score ≤ 0.25)

The three cases can be the results of real duplications followed by gene losses (as shown in the picture below), but most of the times occur as the result of a wrong gene tree topology with a spurious duplication node. Often times, assembly errors are behind these problems. It is not clear whether these genes are real orthologs or not, but they are the best available candidates (given the data), and we bend the definition of orthology to tag them as orthologues. They however represent a lower confidence set of orthologues, and are marked as such in BioMart. At the API / database level, there are marked as "non-compliant with the gene tree". People interested in phylogenetic analysis mixing the orthologies and the trees should probably use the set of high confidence orthologies.
tree_example2

A paralog labelled as a gene_split is an artefactual type of paralogy. It is commonly related to fragmented genome assemblies or a gene prediction that is poor in supporting evidences (cDNA, ESTs, proteins, etc.). Right after building the multiple alignment, we detect pairs pairs of genes that lie close to each other (<1MB) in the same sequence region and the same strand (see GeneA1/GeneA2 below). They are forced to be paired in the gene trees under gene_split events, and represent our most confident set. When there is no (or little) overlap between the gene fragments in the same species and they lie in different sequence regions in the assembly (see GeneB1/GeneB2 in the image below), we let TreeBeST5 decide their best position in the tree. They are linked by duplication nodes, and have a lower confidence index.
gene split

Notes and References

  1. Camacho C et al,, "BLAST+: architecture and applications." BMC Bioinformatics. 2009 Dec 15;10:421.
    We use the version 2.2.28, with the parameters: -seg no -max_hsps_per_subject 1 -use_sw_tback -num_threads 1
  2. Li, H et al., Hcluster_sg: hierarchical clustering software for sparse graphs.
    We use yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) as an outgroup (via the -C option) and the following command line arguments: -m 750 -w 0 -s 0.34 -O
    The weights used in the graph are MIN(100, ROUND(-LOG10(evalue)/2))
  3. M-Coffee: Wallace IM, O'Sullivan O, Higgins DG, Notredame C. "M-Coffee: combining multiple sequence alignment methods with T-Coffee." Nucleic Acid Research. 2006 Mar 23;34(6):1692-9.
    We use the version 9.03.r1318, with the aligner set: mafftgins_msa, muscle_msa, kalign_msa, t_coffee_msa
  4. Mafft: Katoh K, Standley DM. "MAFFT multiple sequence alignment software version 7: improvements in performance and usability." Mol Biol Evol. 2013 Apr;30(4):772-80
    We use the version 7.113 with the command line options: --auto
  5. Li, H et al., Compara-specific version, Original version (TreeBeST was previously known as NJTREE)
  6. Yang, Z. "PAML: a program package for phylogenetic analysis by maximum likelihood" Comput Appl Biosci. 1997 Oct; 13(5):555-556.
    The parameters can be found in ensembl-compara/scripts/homology/codeml.ctl.hash
  7. QuickTree: Howe K, Bateman A and Durbin R, "QuickTree: building huge Neighbour-Joining trees of protein sequences." Bioinformatics (Oxford, England) 2002;18;11;1546-7
    QuickTree builds an unrooted tree and we recursively split the cluster by finding a branch that roughly holds half of the nodes on each side.