Human-specific nonsense mutations identified by genome sequence comparisons

被引:0
|
作者
Yoonsoo Hahn
Byungkook Lee
机构
[1] National Institutes of Health,Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute
来源
Human Genetics | 2006年 / 119卷
关键词
Nonsense mutation; Human; Chimpanzee; Molecular evolution;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The comparative study of the human and chimpanzee genomes may shed light on the genetic ingredients for the evolution of the unique traits of humans. Here, we present a simple procedure to identify human-specific nonsense mutations that might have arisen since the human–chimpanzee divergence. The procedure involves collecting orthologous sequences in which a stop codon of the human sequence is aligned to a non-stop codon in the chimpanzee sequence and verifying that the latter is ancestral by finding homologs in other species without a stop codon. Using this procedure, we identify nine genes (CML2, FLJ14640, MT1L, NPPA, PDE3B, SERPINA13, TAP2, UIP1, and ZNF277) that would produce human-specific truncated proteins resulting in a loss or modification of the function. The premature terminations of CML2, MT1L, and SERPINA13 genes appear to abolish the original function of the encoded protein because the mutation removes a major part of the known active site in each case. The other six mutated genes are either known or presumed to produce functionally modified proteins. The mutations of five genes (CML2, FLJ14640, MT1L, NPPA, TAP2) are known or predicted to be polymorphic in humans. In these cases, the stop codon alleles are more prevalent than the ancestral allele, suggesting that the mutant alleles are approaching fixation since their emergence during the human evolution. The findings support the notion that functional modification or inactivation of genes by nonsense mutation is a part of the process of adaptive evolution and acquisition of species-specific features.
引用
收藏
页码:169 / 178
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Human-specific nonsense mutations identified by genome sequence comparisons
    Hahn, Y
    Lee, B
    HUMAN GENETICS, 2006, 119 (1-2) : 169 - 178
  • [2] Identification of nine human-specific frameshift mutations by comparative analysis of the human and the chimpanzee genome sequences
    Hahn, Y
    Lee, B
    BIOINFORMATICS, 2005, 21 : I186 - I194
  • [3] All Human-Specific Gene Losses Are Present in the Genome as Pseudogenes
    Schrider, Daniel R.
    Costello, James C.
    Hahn, Matthew W.
    JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY, 2009, 16 (10) : 1419 - 1427
  • [4] Human-specific changes of genome structure detected by genomic triangulation
    Harris, R. A.
    Rogers, J.
    Milosavljevic, A.
    SCIENCE, 2007, 316 (5822) : 235 - 237
  • [5] Human-specific loss of regulatory DNA and the evolution of human-specific traits
    McLean, Cory Y.
    Reno, Philip L.
    Pollen, Alex A.
    Bassan, Abraham I.
    Capellini, Terence D.
    Guenther, Catherine
    Indjeian, Vahan B.
    Lim, Xinhong
    Menke, Douglas B.
    Schaar, Bruce T.
    Wenger, Aaron M.
    Bejerano, Gill
    Kingsley, David M.
    NATURE, 2011, 471 (7337) : 216 - 219
  • [6] Human-specific loss of regulatory DNA and the evolution of human-specific traits
    Cory Y. McLean
    Philip L. Reno
    Alex A. Pollen
    Abraham I. Bassan
    Terence D. Capellini
    Catherine Guenther
    Vahan B. Indjeian
    Xinhong Lim
    Douglas B. Menke
    Bruce T. Schaar
    Aaron M. Wenger
    Gill Bejerano
    David M. Kingsley
    Nature, 2011, 471 : 216 - 219
  • [7] Identification of human-specific transcript variants induced by DNA insertions in the human genome
    Kim, Dong Seon
    Hahn, Yoonsoo
    BIOINFORMATICS, 2011, 27 (01) : 14 - 21
  • [8] Mobile elements contribute to the uniqueness of human genome with 15,000 human-specific insertions and 14 Mbp sequence increase
    Tang, Wanxiangfu
    Mun, Seyoung
    Joshi, Aditya
    Han, Kyudong
    Liang, Ping
    DNA RESEARCH, 2018, 25 (05) : 521 - 533
  • [9] Human-specific regulation of neural maturation identified by cross-primate transcriptomics
    Linker, Sara B.
    Narvaiza, Inigo
    Hsu, Jonathan Y.
    Wang, Meiyan
    Qiu, Fan
    Mendes, Ana P. D.
    Oefner, Ruth
    Kottilil, Kalyani
    Sharma, Amandeep
    Randolph-Moore, Lynne
    Mejia, Eunice
    Santos, Renata
    Marchetto, Maria C.
    Gage, Fred H.
    CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2022, 32 (22) : 4797 - +
  • [10] Human-specific insertions and deletions inferred from mammalian genome sequences
    Chen, Feng-Chi
    Chen, Chueng-Jong
    Li, Wen-Hsiung
    Chuang, Trees-Juen
    GENOME RESEARCH, 2007, 17 (01) : 16 - 22