Literature DB >> 12618367

Segmental duplications in euchromatic regions of human chromosome 5: a source of evolutionary instability and transcriptional innovation.

Anouk Courseaux1, Florence Richard, Josiane Grosgeorge, Christine Ortola, Agnes Viale, Claude Turc-Carel, Bernard Dutrillaux, Patrick Gaudray, Jean-Louis Nahon.   

Abstract

Recent analyses of the structure of pericentromeric and subtelomeric regions have revealed that these particular regions of human chromosomes are often composed of blocks of duplicated genomic segments that have been associated with rapid evolutionary turnover among the genomes of closely related primates. In the present study, we show that euchromatic regions of human chromosome 5-5p14, 5p13, 5q13, 5q15-5q21-also display such an accumulation of segmental duplications. The structure, organization and evolution of those primate-specific sequences were studied in detail by combining in silico and comparative FISH analyses on human, chimpanzee, gorilla, orangutang, macaca, and capuchin chromosomes. Our results lend support to a two-step model of transposition duplication in the euchromatic regions, with a founder insertional event at the time of divergence between Platyrrhini and Catarrhini (25-35 million years ago) and an apparent burst of inter- and intrachromosomal duplications in the Hominidae lineage. Furthermore, phylogenetic analysis suggests that the chronology and, likely, molecular mechanisms, differ regarding the region of primary insertion-euchromatic versus pericentromeric regions. Lastly, we show that as their counterparts located near the heterochromatic region, the euchromatic segmental duplications have consistently reshaped their region of insertion during primate evolution, creating putative mosaic genes, and they are obvious candidates for causing ectopic rearrangements that have contributed to evolutionary/genomic instability.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12618367      PMCID: PMC430257          DOI: 10.1101/gr.490303

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genome Res        ISSN: 1088-9051            Impact factor:   9.043


  60 in total

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9.  Segmental duplications and evolutionary plasticity at tumor chromosome break-prone regions.

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10.  Primate-specific spliced PMCHL RNAs are non-protein coding in human and macaque tissues.

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