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Base‐Biased Evolution of Disease‐Associated Mutations in the Human Genome
Author(s) -
Xue Cheng,
Chen Hua,
Yu Fuli
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
human mutation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 162
eISSN - 1098-1004
pISSN - 1059-7794
DOI - 10.1002/humu.23065
Subject(s) - biology , genetics , mutation , genome , gene conversion , mutation accumulation , population , mutation rate , mutagenesis , gene , point mutation , demography , sociology
Understanding the evolution of disease‐associated mutations is fundamental to analyze pathogenetics of diseases. Mutation, recombination (by GC‐biased gene conversion, gBGC), and selection have been known to shape the evolution of disease‐associated mutations, but how these evolutionary forces work together is still an open question. In this study, we analyzed several human large‐scale datasets (1000 Genomes, ESP6500, ExAC and ClinVar), and found that base‐biased mutagenesis generates more GC→AT than AT→GC mutations, while gBGC promotes the fixation of AT→GC mutations to balance the impact of base‐biased mutation on genome. Due to this effect of gBGC, purifying selection removes more deleterious AT→GC mutations than GC→AT from population, but many high‐frequency (fixed and nearly fixed) deleterious AT→GC mutations are remained possibly due to high genetic load. As a special subset, disease‐associated mutations follow this evolutionary rule, in which disease‐associated GC→AT mutations are more enriched in rare mutations compared with AT→GC, while disease‐associated AT→GC are more enriched in mutations with high frequency. Thus, we presented a base‐biased evolutionary framework that explains the base‐biased generation and accumulation of disease‐associated mutations in human populations.