Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Evolutionary Breakpoints in the Gibbon Suggest Association between Cytosine Methylation and Karyotype Evolution

2009; Public Library of Science; Volume: 5; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1371/journal.pgen.1000538

ISSN

1553-7404

Autores

Lucia Carbone, R. Alan Harris, Gery M. Vessere, Alan R. Mootnick, Sean Humphray, Jane Rogers, Sung K. Kim, Jeffrey D. Wall, David I. K. Martin, Jerzy Jurka, Aleksandar Milosavljevic, Pieter J. de Jong,

Tópico(s)

Epigenetics and DNA Methylation

Resumo

Gibbon species have accumulated an unusually high number of chromosomal changes since diverging from the common hominoid ancestor 15-18 million years ago. The cause of this increased rate of chromosomal rearrangements is not known, nor is it known if genome architecture has a role. To address this question, we analyzed sequences spanning 57 breaks of synteny between northern white-cheeked gibbons (Nomascus l. leucogenys) and humans. We find that the breakpoint regions are enriched in segmental duplications and repeats, with Alu elements being the most abundant. Alus located near the gibbon breakpoints (<150 bp) have a higher CpG content than other Alus. Bisulphite allelic sequencing reveals that these gibbon Alus have a lower average density of methylated cytosine that their human orthologues. The finding of higher CpG content and lower average CpG methylation suggests that the gibbon Alu elements are epigenetically distinct from their human orthologues. The association between undermethylation and chromosomal rearrangement in gibbons suggests a correlation between epigenetic state and structural genome variation in evolution.

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