Author:
Mohajeri Kiana,Cantsilieris Stuart,Huddleston John,Nelson Bradley J.,Coe Bradley P.,Campbell Catarina D.,Baker Carl,Harshman Lana,Munson Katherine M.,Kronenberg Zev N.,Kremitzki Milinn,Raja Archana,Catacchio Claudia Rita,Graves Tina A.,Wilson Richard K.,Ventura Mario,Eichler Evan E.
Abstract
Recurrent rearrangements of Chromosome 8p23.1 are associated with congenital heart defects and developmental delay. The complexity of this region has led to inconsistencies in the current reference assembly, confounding studies of genetic variation. Using comparative sequence-based approaches, we generated a high-quality 6.3-Mbp alternate reference assembly of an inverted Chromosome 8p23.1 haplotype. Comparison with nonhuman primates reveals a 746-kbp duplicative transposition and two separate inversion events that arose in the last million years of human evolution. The breakpoints associated with these rearrangements map to an ape-specific interchromosomal core duplicon that clusters at sites of evolutionary inversion (P = 7.8 × 10−5). Refinement of microdeletion breakpoints identifies a subgroup of patients that map to the same interchromosomal core involved in the evolutionary formation of the duplication blocks. Our results define a higher-order genomic instability element that has shaped the structure of specific chromosomes during primate evolution contributing to rearrangements associated with inversion and disease.
Funder
US National Institutes of Health
NIH
American Asthma Foundation Senior Investigator award
National Health and Medical Research Council
CJ Martin Biomedical
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Genetics
Cited by
36 articles.
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