High mutation rates in human and ape pseudoautosomal genes
It has been suggested that recombination may be mutagenic, which, if true, would inflate intraspecies diversity and interspecies silent divergence in regions of high recombination. Here, we test this hypothesis comparing human/orangutan genome-wide non-coding divergence ( K) to that in the pseudoaut...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Gene 2003-10, Vol.317 (1-2), p.67-77 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | It has been suggested that recombination may be mutagenic, which, if true, would inflate intraspecies diversity and interspecies silent divergence in regions of high recombination. Here, we test this hypothesis comparing human/orangutan genome-wide non-coding divergence (
K) to that in the pseudoautosomal genes which were reported to recombine much more frequently than the rest of the genome. We demonstrate that, compared to the average human/orangutan non-coding divergence (
K=3%), the substitution rate is significantly elevated in the introns of
SHOX (
K=5.7%),
PPP2R3L (
K=8.7%) and
ASMT (
K=6.5%) genes located in the human and orangutan Xp/Yp pseudoautosomal region (p-PAR), where recombination is over 20-fold higher than the genomic average. On the other hand, human/orangutan non-coding divergence at the Xp/Yp pseudoautosomal boundary (
K=3.5%) and in the
SYBL1 gene (
K=2.7%), located in the human Xq/Yq pseudoautosomal region (q-PAR), where recombination is known to be less frequent than in p-PAR, was not significantly higher than the genome average. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that recombination may be mutagenic. |
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ISSN: | 0378-1119 1879-0038 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0378-1119(03)00697-8 |