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The DNA sequence and biology of human chromosome 19

Authors :
Mary Bao Tran-Gyamfi
Ivan Ovcharenko
Trevor Hawkins
Maria Gomez
Mirian Denys
Victor V. Solovyev
Terrence S. Furey
Jamie Jett
Jeremy Schmutz
Dea Fotopulos
David Gordon
Tom Slezak
Kevin Wu
Heather Kimball
Pieter J. deJong
Catherine Medina
Vladimer Larionov
Paula McCready
Stephanine Rogers
James Retterer
John C. Detter
Diego Martinez
Richard M. Myers
Paul Predki
Stacey Black
Eva Bajorek
Chenier Caoile
Alex Rodriguez
Isaac Ho
Arthur Kobayashi
Jane Lamerdin
Xinwei She
Yunian Lou
Jane Grimwood
Kristen Kadner
Alex Copeland
Wayne Huang
Sanjay Israni
Carmen Rosa Albacete García
Gary Xie
Doug Smith
Anthony V. Carrano
Matthew Groza
Catherine A. Cleland
Matt Nolan
Paul G. Richardson
Eidelyn Gonzales
Nina Thayer
Anna Ustaszewska
Eileen Dalin
Olivier Couronne
Evan E. Eichler
Tijana Glavina
Astrid Terry
Sun-Hee Leem
Steve Lowry
Anne S. Olsen
Lucía Ramírez
Ming Tsai
Stephanie Malfatti
Hope Tice
Uffe Hellsten
David Goodstein
Martin Pollard
Daniel S. Rokhsar
Nancy Hammon
Angelica Salazar
Jenna Morgan
Yee Man Chan
Michael R. Altherr
Paramvir S. Dehal
Nu Vo
Linda K. Ashworth
Elbert Branscomb
Laurie Gordon
Julio Escobar
Anthony P. Popkie
Dave Flowers
Anca M. Georgescu
Len A. Pennacchio
Sam Pitluck
Sam Rash
Edward M. Rubin
Sean Caenepeel
Glenda Quan
Asaf Salamov
Inna Dubchak
Lisa Stubbs
Andrea Aerts
Mark Dickson
Kathryn Nelson
Mari Christensen
Lauren Haydu
Frederick Lopez
Mark C. Wagner
Jeremy Wheeler
Joan Yang
Susan Lucas
Source :
Nature. 428(6982)
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

Chromosome 19 has the highest gene density of all human chromosomes, more than double the genome-wide average. The large clustered gene families, corresponding high G + C content, CpG islands and density of repetitive DNA indicate a chromosome rich in biological and evolutionary significance. Here we describe 55.8 million base pairs of highly accurate finished sequence representing 99.9% of the euchromatin portion of the chromosome. Manual curation of gene loci reveals 1,461 protein-coding genes and 321 pseudogenes. Among these are genes directly implicated in mendelian disorders, including familial hypercholesterolaemia and insulin-resistant diabetes. Nearly one-quarter of these genes belong to tandemly arranged families, encompassing more than 25% of the chromosome. Comparative analyses show a fascinating picture of conservation and divergence, revealing large blocks of gene orthology with rodents, scattered regions with more recent gene family expansions and deletions, and segments of coding and non-coding conservation with the distant fish species Takifugu.

Details

ISSN :
14764687
Volume :
428
Issue :
6982
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0c13925344de9b7b7d0dfe16e81545dc