Diverse Molecular Mechanisms Contribute to Differential Expression of Human Duplicated Genes

Author:

Shew Colin J12,Carmona-Mora Paulina134,Soto Daniela C12,Mastoras Mira1,Roberts Elizabeth1,Rosas Joseph15,Jagannathan Dhriti1,Kaya Gulhan1,O’Geen Henriette1,Dennis Megan Y12345ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Genome Center, University of California Davis, CA, USA

2. Integrative Genetics and Genomics Graduate Group, University of California Davis, CA, USA

3. MIND Institute, University of California, Davis, CA, USA

4. Autism Research Training Program, University of California, Davis, CA, USA

5. Postbaccalaureate Research Education Program, University of California, Davis, CA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Emerging evidence links genes within human-specific segmental duplications (HSDs) to traits and diseases unique to our species. Strikingly, despite being nearly identical by sequence (>98.5%), paralogous HSD genes are differentially expressed across human cell and tissue types, though the underlying mechanisms have not been examined. We compared cross-tissue mRNA levels of 75 HSD genes from 30 families between humans and chimpanzees and found expression patterns consistent with relaxed selection on or neofunctionalization of derived paralogs. In general, ancestral paralogs exhibited greatest expression conservation with chimpanzee orthologs, though exceptions suggest certain derived paralogs may retain or supplant ancestral functions. Concordantly, analysis of long-read isoform sequencing data sets from diverse human tissues and cell lines found that about half of derived paralogs exhibited globally lower expression. To understand mechanisms underlying these differences, we leveraged data from human lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) and found no relationship between paralogous expression divergence and post-transcriptional regulation, sequence divergence, or copy-number variation. Considering cis-regulation, we reanalyzed ENCODE data and recovered hundreds of previously unidentified candidate CREs in HSDs. We also generated large-insert ChIP-sequencing data for active chromatin features in an LCL to better distinguish paralogous regions. Some duplicated CREs were sufficient to drive differential reporter activity, suggesting they may contribute to divergent cis-regulation of paralogous genes. This work provides evidence that cis-regulatory divergence contributes to novel expression patterns of recent gene duplicates in humans.

Funder

National Human Genome Research Institute

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

National Institute of Mental Health

National Institutes of Health

MIND Institute Intellectual and Developmental Disability Research Center

NIH National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Sloan fellow

NIH National Institute of Mental Health T32 UC Davis Autism Research Training Program fellow

NIH National Institute of General Medical Sciences UC Davis Postbaccalaureate Research Education Program fellow

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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