Title
Landscape and variation of novel retroduplications in 26 human populations.
Abstract
Retroduplications come from reverse transcription of mRNAs and their insertion back into the genome. Here, we performed comprehensive discovery and analysis of retroduplications in a large cohort of 2,535 individuals from 26 human populations, as part of 1000 Genomes Phase 3. We developed an integrated approach to discover novel retroduplications combining high-coverage exome and low-coverage whole-genome sequencing data, utilizing information from both exon-exon junctions and discordant paired-end reads. We found 503 parent genes having novel retroduplications absent from the reference genome. Based solely on retroduplication variation, we built phylogenetic trees of human populations; these represent superpopulation structure well and indicate that variable retroduplications are effective population markers. We further identified 43 retroduplication parent genes differentiating superpopulations. This group contains several interesting insertion events, including a SLMO2 retroduplication and insertion into CAV3, which has a potential disease association. We also found retroduplications to be associated with a variety of genomic features: (1) Insertion sites were correlated with regular nucleosome positioning. (2) They, predictably, tend to avoid conserved functional regions, such as exons, but, somewhat surprisingly, also avoid introns. (3) Retroduplications tend to be co-inserted with young L1 elements, indicating recent retrotranspositional activity, and (4) they have a weak tendency to originate from highly expressed parent genes. Our investigation provides insight into the functional impact and association with genomic elements of retroduplications. We anticipate our approach and analytical methodology to have application in a more clinical context, where exome sequencing data is abundant and the discovery of retroduplications can potentially improve the accuracy of SNP calling.
Year
DOI
Venue
2017
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005567
PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
Field
DocType
Volume
Pseudogene,Genome,Biology,Exome,Functional genomics,Genome evolution,1000 Genomes Project,Bioinformatics,Genetics,Exome sequencing,Reference genome
Journal
13
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
6
1553-7358
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
3
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Yan Zhang111.70
Li Shantao200.34
Alexej Abyzov3617.42
Mark Gerstein435445.41