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1.
Int J Mol Sci ; 24(21)2023 Oct 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37958807

ABSTRACT

The impact of segmental duplications on human evolution and disease is only just starting to unfold, thanks to advancements in sequencing technologies that allow for their discovery and precise genotyping. The 15q11-q13 locus is a hotspot of recurrent copy number variation associated with Prader-Willi/Angelman syndromes, developmental delay, autism, and epilepsy and is mediated by complex segmental duplications, many of which arose recently during evolution. To gain insight into the instability of this region, we characterized its architecture in human and nonhuman primates, reconstructing the evolutionary history of five different inversions that rearranged the region in different species primarily by accumulation of segmental duplications. Comparative analysis of human and nonhuman primate duplication structures suggests a human-specific gain of directly oriented duplications in the regions flanking the GOLGA cores and HERC segmental duplications, representing potential genomic drivers for the human-specific expansions. The increasing complexity of segmental duplication organization over the course of evolution underlies its association with human susceptibility to recurrent disease-associated rearrangements.


Subject(s)
Autistic Disorder , Prader-Willi Syndrome , Animals , Humans , DNA Copy Number Variations/genetics , Primates/genetics , Prader-Willi Syndrome/genetics , Segmental Duplications, Genomic/genetics , Autistic Disorder/genetics , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 15/genetics , Gene Duplication
2.
Science ; 370(6523)2020 12 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33335035

ABSTRACT

The rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta) is the most widely studied nonhuman primate (NHP) in biomedical research. We present an updated reference genome assembly (Mmul_10, contig N50 = 46 Mbp) that increases the sequence contiguity 120-fold and annotate it using 6.5 million full-length transcripts, thus improving our understanding of gene content, isoform diversity, and repeat organization. With the improved assembly of segmental duplications, we discovered new lineage-specific genes and expanded gene families that are potentially informative in studies of evolution and disease susceptibility. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) data from 853 rhesus macaques identified 85.7 million single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) and 10.5 million indel variants, including potentially damaging variants in genes associated with human autism and developmental delay, providing a framework for developing noninvasive NHP models of human disease.


Subject(s)
Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genome , Macaca mulatta/genetics , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Animals , Genetic Variation , Humans , Molecular Sequence Annotation , Whole Genome Sequencing
3.
PLoS Genet ; 15(3): e1008075, 2019 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30917130

ABSTRACT

Human chromosome 15q25 is involved in several disease-associated structural rearrangements, including microdeletions and chromosomal markers with inverted duplications. Using comparative fluorescence in situ hybridization, strand-sequencing, single-molecule, real-time sequencing and Bionano optical mapping analyses, we investigated the organization of the 15q25 region in human and nonhuman primates. We found that two independent inversions occurred in this region after the fission event that gave rise to phylogenetic chromosomes XIV and XV in humans and great apes. One of these inversions is still polymorphic in the human population today and may confer differential susceptibility to 15q25 microdeletions and inverted duplications. The inversion breakpoints map within segmental duplications containing core duplicons of the GOLGA gene family and correspond to the site of an ancestral centromere, which became inactivated about 25 million years ago. The inactivation of this centromere likely released segmental duplications from recombination repression typical of centromeric regions. We hypothesize that this increased the frequency of ectopic recombination creating a hotspot of hominid inversions where dispersed GOLGA core elements now predispose this region to recurrent genomic rearrangements associated with disease.


Subject(s)
Chromosome Inversion , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 15/genetics , Segmental Duplications, Genomic , Animals , Autoantigens/genetics , Chromosomal Instability , Evolution, Molecular , Gene Dosage , Gene Rearrangement , Genetic Variation , Golgi Matrix Proteins/genetics , Hominidae/genetics , Humans , Multigene Family , Phylogeny , Primates/genetics , Recombination, Genetic , Species Specificity
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