Restriction Enzyme Based Enriched L1Hs Sequencing (REBELseq): A Scalable Technique for Detection of Ta Subfamily L1Hs in the Human Genome
Author(s) -
Benjamin C. Reiner,
Glenn A. Doyle,
Andrew E. Weller,
Rachel N. Levinson,
Esin C. Namoglu,
Alicia Pigeon,
Emilie Dávila Perea,
Cynthia Shan Weickert,
Gustavo Turecki,
Deborah C. Mash,
Richard C. Crist,
Wade H. Berrettini
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
g3 genes genomes genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.468
H-Index - 66
ISSN - 2160-1836
DOI - 10.1534/g3.119.400613
Subject(s) - retrotransposon , subfamily , biology , genome , human genome , genetics , interspersed repeat , mobile genetic elements , dna sequencing , computational biology , retroposon , gene , transposable element
Long interspersed element-1 retrotransposons (LINE-1 or L1) are ∼6 kb mobile DNA elements implicated in the origins of many Mendelian and complex diseases. The actively retrotransposing L1s are mostly limited to the L1 human specific (L1Hs) transcriptional active (Ta) subfamily. In this manuscript, we present REBELseq as a method for the construction of Ta subfamily L1Hs-enriched next-generation sequencing libraries and bioinformatic identification. REBELseq was performed on DNA isolated from NeuN+ neuronal nuclei from postmortem brain samples of 177 individuals and empirically-driven bioinformatic and experimental cutoffs were established. Putative L1Hs insertions passing bioinformatics cutoffs were experimentally validated. REBELseq reliably identified both known and novel Ta subfamily L1Hs insertions distributed throughout the genome. Differences in the proportion of individuals possessing a given reference or non-reference retrotransposon insertion were identified. We conclude that REBELseq is an unbiased, whole genome approach to the amplification and detection of Ta subfamily L1Hs retrotransposons.
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