| Literature DB >> 26186942 |
Dong-Dong Wu1, Ling-Qun Ye2, Yan Li1, Yan-Bo Sun1, Yi Shao3, Chunyan Chen3, Zhu Zhu4, Li Zhong4, Lu Wang4, David M Irwin5, Yong E Zhang3, Ya-Ping Zhang6.
Abstract
Next-generation RNA sequencing has been successfully used for identification of transcript assembly, evaluation of gene expression levels, and detection of post-transcriptional modifications. Despite these large-scale studies, additional comprehensive RNA-seq data from different subregions of the human brain are required to fully evaluate the evolutionary patterns experienced by the human brain transcriptome. Here, we provide a total of 6.5 billion RNA-seq reads from different subregions of the human brain. A significant correlation was observed between the levels of alternative splicing and RNA editing, which might be explained by a competition between the molecular machineries responsible for the splicing and editing of RNA. Young human protein-coding genes demonstrate biased expression to the neocortical and non-neocortical regions during evolution on the lineage leading to humans. We also found that a significantly greater number of young human protein-coding genes are expressed in the putamen, a tissue that was also observed to have the highest level of RNA-editing activity. The putamen, which previously received little attention, plays an important role in cognitive ability, and our data suggest a potential contribution of the putamen to human evolution.Entities:
Keywords: RNA editing; human brain evolution; human brain transcriptome; young gene
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26186942 DOI: 10.1093/jmcb/mjv043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Cell Biol ISSN: 1759-4685 Impact factor: 6.216