Novel H3K4me3 marks are enriched at human- and chimpanzee-specific cytogenetic structures.


Autoria(s): Giannuzzi G.; Migliavacca E.; Reymond A.
Data(s)

2014

Resumo

Human and chimpanzee genomes are 98.8% identical within comparable sequences. However, they differ structurally in nine pericentric inversions, one fusion that originated human chromosome 2, and content and localization of heterochromatin and lineage-specific segmental duplications. The possible functional consequences of these cytogenetic and structural differences are not fully understood and their possible involvement in speciation remains unclear. We show that subtelomeric regions-regions that have a species-specific organization, are more divergent in sequence, and are enriched in genes and recombination hotspots-are significantly enriched for species-specific histone modifications that decorate transcription start sites in different tissues in both human and chimpanzee. The human lineage-specific chromosome 2 fusion point and ancestral centromere locus as well as chromosome 1 and 18 pericentric inversion breakpoints showed enrichment of human-specific H3K4me3 peaks in the prefrontal cortex. Our results reveal an association between plastic regions and potential novel regulatory elements.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_20CA18A8E573

isbn:1549-5469 (Electronic)

pmid:24916972

doi:10.1101/gr.167742.113

isiid:000341281200005

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Genome Research, vol. 24, no. 9, pp. 1455-1468

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article