Covariation in Frequencies of Substitution, Deletion, Transposition, and Recombination During Eutherian Evolution
Author(s) -
Ross C. Hardison,
Krishna M. Roskin,
Shan Yang,
Mark Diekhans,
W. James Kent,
Ryan Weber,
Laura Elnitski,
Jia Li,
Michael J. O’Connor,
Diana L. Kolbe,
Scott Schwartz,
Terrence S. Furey,
Simon Whelan,
Nick Goldman,
Arian F. A. Smit,
Webb Miller,
Francesca Chiaromonte,
David Haussler
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
genome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.556
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1549-5469
pISSN - 1088-9051
DOI - 10.1101/gr.844103
Subject(s) - biology , genome , genetics , human genome , transposable element , gc content , transposition (logic) , genome evolution , gene density , retrotransposon , noncoding dna , gene , linguistics , philosophy
Six measures of evolutionary change in the human genome were studied, three derived from the aligned human and mouse genomes in conjunction with the Mouse Genome Sequencing Consortium, consisting of (1) nucleotide substitution per fourfold degenerate site in coding regions, (2) nucleotide substitution per site in relics of transposable elements active only before the human-mouse speciation, and (3) the nonaligning fraction of human DNA that is nonrepetitive or in ancestral repeats; and three derived from human genome data alone, consisting of (4) SNP density, (5) frequency of insertion of transposable elements, and (6) rate of recombination. Features 1 and 2 are measures of nucleotide substitutions at two classes of "neutral" sites, whereas 4 is a measure of recent mutations. Feature 3 is a measure dominated by deletions in mouse, whereas 5 represents insertions in human. It was found that all six vary significantly in megabase-sized regions genome-wide, and many vary together. This indicates that some regions of a genome change slowly by all processes that alter DNA, and others change faster. Regional variation in all processes is correlated with, but not completely accounted for, by GC content in human and the difference between GC content in human and mouse.
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