Intergenic and Repeat Transcription in Human,Chimpanzee and Macaque Brains Measured by RNA-Seq |
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Authors: | Augix Guohua Xu Liu He Zhongshan Li Ying Xu Mingfeng Li Xing Fu Zheng Yan Yuan Yuan Corinna Menzel Na Li Mehmet Somel Hao Hu Wei Chen Svante P??bo Philipp Khaitovich |
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Affiliation: | 1.Partner Institute for Computational Biology, Shanghai, China;2.Max-Planck-Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany;3.Graduate School of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, China;4.Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Berlin, Germany;5.Max Delbrück Centrum für Molekulare Medizin, Berlin Institute for Medical Systems Biology, Berlin-Buch, Germany;Cornell University, United States of America |
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Abstract: | Transcription is the first step connecting genetic information with an organism''s phenotype. While expression of annotated genes in the human brain has been characterized extensively, our knowledge about the scope and the conservation of transcripts located outside of the known genes'' boundaries is limited. Here, we use high-throughput transcriptome sequencing (RNA-Seq) to characterize the total non-ribosomal transcriptome of human, chimpanzee, and rhesus macaque brain. In all species, only 20–28% of non-ribosomal transcripts correspond to annotated exons and 20–23% to introns. By contrast, transcripts originating within intronic and intergenic repetitive sequences constitute 40–48% of the total brain transcriptome. Notably, some repeat families show elevated transcription. In non-repetitive intergenic regions, we identify and characterize 1,093 distinct regions highly expressed in the human brain. These regions are conserved at the RNA expression level across primates studied and at the DNA sequence level across mammals. A large proportion of these transcripts (20%) represents 3′UTR extensions of known genes and may play roles in alternative microRNA-directed regulation. Finally, we show that while transcriptome divergence between species increases with evolutionary time, intergenic transcripts show more expression differences among species and exons show less. Our results show that many yet uncharacterized evolutionary conserved transcripts exist in the human brain. Some of these transcripts may play roles in transcriptional regulation and contribute to evolution of human-specific phenotypic traits. |
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