Biological Background of Duplicated Sequence Evolution: A Focus on Gene Conversion
- Date
- December 4 (Thu) 13:00 - 14:00, 2025 (JST)
- Speaker
-
- Kenji Okubo (Special Postdoctoral Researcher, Division of Fundamental Mathematical Science, RIKEN Center for Interdisciplinary Theoretical and Mathematical Sciences (iTHEMS))
- Venue
- via Zoom
- Seminar Room #359
- Language
- English
- Host
- Kenji Okubo
Duplicated sequences—such as gene families, tandem arrays, and segmental duplications—are common in many genomes. Their evolution is shaped by several biological processes, including mutation, recombination, duplication, deletion, and gene conversion. Among these, gene conversion is especially important because it can make nearby copies more similar, while leaving distant copies free to diverge.
In this seminar, I will give a broad and accessible overview of the biological background related to duplicated sequences, with a particular focus on what is known about gene conversion. I will summarize well-established patterns such as its dependence on genomic distance, sequence similarity, and recombination context. These biological features are often studied separately, so organizing them in one place can help provide a clearer foundation.
The goal of the talk is to outline the biological principles that motivate thinking about duplicated sequences in a more formal or quantitative way in the future. I will not discuss specific model details. Instead, this presentation will serve as background preparation for later theoretical work.
This is a closed event for scientists. Non-scientists are not allowed to attend. If you are not a member or related person and would like to attend, please contact us using the inquiry form. Please note that the event organizer or speaker must authorize your request to attend.