| Literature DB >> 29686068 |
Stuart Cantsilieris1, Bradley J Nelson1, John Huddleston1,2, Carl Baker1, Lana Harshman1, Kelsi Penewit1, Katherine M Munson1, Melanie Sorensen1, AnneMarie E Welch1, Vy Dang1, Felix Grassmann3, Andrea J Richardson4, Robyn H Guymer4, Tina A Graves-Lindsay5, Richard K Wilson6,7, Bernhard H F Weber3, Paul N Baird4, Rando Allikmets8,9, Evan E Eichler10,2.
Abstract
Structural variation and single-nucleotide variation of the complement factor H (CFH) gene family underlie several complex genetic diseases, including age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (AHUS). To understand its diversity and evolution, we performed high-quality sequencing of this ∼360-kbp locus in six primate lineages, including multiple human haplotypes. Comparative sequence analyses reveal two distinct periods of gene duplication leading to the emergence of four CFH-related (CFHR) gene paralogs (CFHR2 and CFHR4 ∼25-35 Mya and CFHR1 and CFHR3 ∼7-13 Mya). Remarkably, all evolutionary breakpoints share a common ∼4.8-kbp segment corresponding to an ancestral CFHR gene promoter that has expanded independently throughout primate evolution. This segment is recurrently reused and juxtaposed with a donor duplication containing exons 8 and 9 from ancestral CFH, creating four CFHR fusion genes that include lineage-specific members of the gene family. Combined analysis of >5,000 AMD cases and controls identifies a significant burden of a rare missense mutation that clusters at the N terminus of CFH [P = 5.81 × 10-8, odds ratio (OR) = 9.8 (3.67-Infinity)]. A bipolar clustering pattern of rare nonsynonymous mutations in patients with AMD (P < 10-3) and AHUS (P = 0.0079) maps to functional domains that show evidence of positive selection during primate evolution. Our structural variation analysis in >2,400 individuals reveals five recurrent rearrangement breakpoints that show variable frequency among AMD cases and controls. These data suggest a dynamic and recurrent pattern of mutation critical to the emergence of new CFHR genes but also in the predisposition to complex human genetic disease phenotypes.Entities:
Keywords: AMD; CFH gene family; age-related macular degeneration; natural selection; structural variation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29686068 PMCID: PMC5948961 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1717600115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205