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Lineage-specific gene duplication and loss in human and great ape evolution
Authors:Fortna Andrew  Kim Young  MacLaren Erik  Marshall Kriste  Hahn Gretchen  Meltesen Lynne  Brenton Matthew  Hink Raquel  Burgers Sonya  Hernandez-Boussard Tina  Karimpour-Fard Anis  Glueck Deborah  McGavran Loris  Berry Rebecca  Pollack Jonathan  Sikela James M
Institution:1 Department of Pharmacology and Human Medical Genetics Program, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center Denver, Colorado, United States of America ;2 Department of Pathology, Stanford University Stanford, California, United States of America ;3 Colorado Genetics Laboratory, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center Denver, Colorado, United States of America ;4 Department of Genetics, Stanford University Stanford, California, United States of America ;5 Department of Preventive Medicine and Biometrics, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center Denver, Colorado United States of America
Abstract:Given that gene duplication is a major driving force of evolutionary change and the key mechanism underlying the emergence of new genes and biological processes, this study sought to use a novel genome-wide approach to identify genes that have undergone lineage-specific duplications or contractions among several hominoid lineages. Interspecies cDNA array-based comparative genomic hybridization was used to individually compare copy number variation for 39,711 cDNAs, representing 29,619 human genes, across five hominoid species, including human. We identified 1,005 genes, either as isolated genes or in clusters positionally biased toward rearrangement-prone genomic regions, that produced relative hybridization signals unique to one or more of the hominoid lineages. Measured as a function of the evolutionary age of each lineage, genes showing copy number expansions were most pronounced in human (134) and include a number of genes thought to be involved in the structure and function of the brain. This work represents, to our knowledge, the first genome-wide gene-based survey of gene duplication across hominoid species. The genes identified here likely represent a significant majority of the major gene copy number changes that have occurred over the past 15 million years of human and great ape evolution and are likely to underlie some of the key phenotypic characteristics that distinguish these species.
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