AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines chromosome 15q25, which is linked to various diseases due to structural changes like microdeletions and duplications.
  • Researchers used advanced techniques, including fluorescence in situ hybridization and sequencing methods, to analyze this chromosome in humans and nonhuman primates.
  • They discovered that two significant inversions occurred in the 15q25 region after a major evolutionary event and that one of these inversions remains common in humans today, potentially affecting susceptibility to related genomic diseases.

Article 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.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6436712PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008075DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • * Advanced sequencing technologies have revealed the complexity and instability of this region, tracing the evolutionary history of segmental duplications and inversions in humans and nonhuman primates.
  • * The findings suggest that unique human duplications might contribute to our vulnerability to certain diseases, highlighting the evolving role of segmental duplications in genetics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study examines chromosome 15q25, which is linked to various diseases due to structural changes like microdeletions and duplications.
  • Researchers used advanced techniques, including fluorescence in situ hybridization and sequencing methods, to analyze this chromosome in humans and nonhuman primates.
  • They discovered that two significant inversions occurred in the 15q25 region after a major evolutionary event and that one of these inversions remains common in humans today, potentially affecting susceptibility to related genomic diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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