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Recurrent inversion polymorphisms in humans associate with genetic instability and genomic disorders
Author(s) -
David Porubský,
Wolfram Höps,
Hufsah Ashraf,
PingHsun Hsieh,
Bernardo Rodríguez–Martín,
Feyza Yilmaz,
Jana Ebler,
Pille Hallast,
Flavia Angela Maria Maggiolini,
William T. Harvey,
Barbara Henning,
Peter A. Audano,
David Gordon,
Peter Ebert,
Patrick Hasenfeld,
Eva Benito,
Qihui Zhu,
Charles Lee,
Francesca Antonacci,
Matthias Steinrücken,
Christine R. Beck,
Ashley D. Sanders,
Tobias Marschall,
Evan E. Eichler,
Jan O. Korbel
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2022.04.017
Subject(s) - biology , genetics , retrotransposon , copy number variation , haplotype , locus (genetics) , non allelic homologous recombination , genome , chromosomal inversion , allele , structural variation , genomics , genome instability , homologous recombination , recombination , transposable element , gene , dna , chromosome , genetic recombination , karyotype , dna damage
Unlike copy number variants (CNVs), inversions remain an underexplored genetic variation class. By integrating multiple genomic technologies, we discover 729 inversions in 41 human genomes. Approximately 85% of inversions <2 kbp form by twin-priming during L1 retrotransposition; 80% of the larger inversions are balanced and affect twice as many nucleotides as CNVs. Balanced inversions show an excess of common variants, and 72% are flanked by segmental duplications (SDs) or retrotransposons. Since flanking repeats promote non-allelic homologous recombination, we developed complementary approaches to identify recurrent inversion formation. We describe 40 recurrent inversions encompassing 0.6% of the genome, showing inversion rates up to 2.7 × 10 -4 per locus per generation. Recurrent inversions exhibit a sex-chromosomal bias and co-localize with genomic disorder critical regions. We propose that inversion recurrence results in an elevated number of heterozygous carriers and structural SD diversity, which increases mutability in the population and predisposes specific haplotypes to disease-causing CNVs.

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