SeqURE - a new copy-capture based method for sequencing of unknown Retroposition events

Retroelements (REs) occupy a significant part of all eukaryotic genomes including humans. The majority of retroelements in the human genome are inactive and unable to retrotranspose. Dozens of active copies are repressed in most normal tissues by various cellular mechanisms. These copies can become...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mobile DNA 2020-12, Vol.11 (1), p.33-12, Article 33
Hauptverfasser: Komkov, Alexander Y, Urazbakhtin, Shamil Z, Saliutina, Maria V, Komech, Ekaterina A, Shelygin, Yuri A, Nugmanov, Gaiaz A, Shubin, Vitaliy P, Smirnova, Anastasia O, Bobrov, Mikhail Y, Tsukanov, Alexey S, Snezhkina, Anastasia V, Kudryavtseva, Anna V, Lebedev, Yuri B, Mamedov, Ilgar Z
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Retroelements (REs) occupy a significant part of all eukaryotic genomes including humans. The majority of retroelements in the human genome are inactive and unable to retrotranspose. Dozens of active copies are repressed in most normal tissues by various cellular mechanisms. These copies can become active in normal germline and brain tissues or in cancer, leading to new retroposition events. The consequences of such events and their role in normal cell functioning and carcinogenesis are not yet fully understood. If new insertions occur in a small portion of cells they can be found only with the use of specific methods based on RE enrichment and high-throughput sequencing. The downside of the high sensitivity of such methods is the presence of various artifacts imitating real insertions, which in many cases cannot be validated due to lack of the initial template DNA. For this reason, adequate assessment of rare (
ISSN:1759-8753
1759-8753
DOI:10.1186/s13100-020-00228-6