L1-associated genomic regions are deleted in somatic cells of the healthy human brain

The healthy human brain is a mosaic of varied genomes. Using a single cell sequencing approach targeting L1 elements, the authors show that the contribution of L1 to somatic mosaicism goes beyond retrotransposition and includes deletion of genomic regions associated with L1. The healthy human brain...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature neuroscience 2016-12, Vol.19 (12), p.1583-1591
Hauptverfasser: Erwin, Jennifer A, Paquola, Apuã C M, Singer, Tatjana, Gallina, Iryna, Novotny, Mark, Quayle, Carolina, Bedrosian, Tracy A, Alves, Francisco I A, Butcher, Cheyenne R, Herdy, Joseph R, Sarkar, Anindita, Lasken, Roger S, Muotri, Alysson R, Gage, Fred H
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The healthy human brain is a mosaic of varied genomes. Using a single cell sequencing approach targeting L1 elements, the authors show that the contribution of L1 to somatic mosaicism goes beyond retrotransposition and includes deletion of genomic regions associated with L1. The healthy human brain is a mosaic of varied genomes. Long interspersed element-1 (LINE-1 or L1) retrotransposition is known to create mosaicism by inserting L1 sequences into new locations of somatic cell genomes. Using a machine learning-based, single-cell sequencing approach, we discovered that somatic L1-associated variants (SLAVs) are composed of two classes: L1 retrotransposition insertions and retrotransposition-independent L1-associated variants. We demonstrate that a subset of SLAVs comprises somatic deletions generated by L1 endonuclease cutting activity. Retrotransposition-independent rearrangements in inherited L1s resulted in the deletion of proximal genomic regions. These rearrangements were resolved by microhomology-mediated repair, which suggests that L1-associated genomic regions are hotspots for somatic copy number variants in the brain and therefore a heritable genetic contributor to somatic mosaicism. We demonstrate that SLAVs are present in crucial neural genes, such as DLG2 (also called PSD93 ), and affect 44–63% of cells of the cells in the healthy brain.
ISSN:1097-6256
1546-1726
DOI:10.1038/nn.4388