AI Article Synopsis

  • * This study investigates the presence and structure of the PER3 VNTR in various primate species to understand its evolutionary significance.
  • * Findings indicate that the PER3 VNTR exists only in simiiforme primates, with copy numbers ranging from 2 to 11, suggesting it evolved in a common ancestor and may impact sleep and circadian rhythms among these species.

Article Abstract

The PER3 gene is one of the clock genes, which function in the core mammalian molecular circadian system. A variable number of tandem repeats (VNTR) locus in the 18th exon of this gene has been strongly associated to circadian rhythm phenotypes and sleep organization in humans, but it has not been identified in other mammals except primates. To better understand the evolution and the placement of the PER3 VNTR in a phylogenetical context, the present study enlarges the investigation about the presence and the structure of this variable region in a large sample of primate species and other mammals. The analysis of the results has revealed that the PER3 VNTR occurs exclusively in simiiforme primates and that the number of copies of the primitive unit ranges from 2 to 11 across different primate species. Two transposable elements surrounding the 18th exon of PER3 were found in primates with published genome sequences, including the tarsiiforme Tarsius syrichta, which lacks the VNTR. These results suggest that this VNTR may have evolved in a common ancestor of the simiiforme branch and that the evolutionary copy number differentiation of this VNTR may be associated with primate simiiformes sleep and circadian phenotype patterns.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4164614PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0107198PLOS

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