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Epigenetic origin of evolutionary novel centromeres

Authors :
Pietro D'Addabbo
Nicoletta Archidiacono
Claudia Rita Catacchio
Doron Tolomeo
Evan E. Eichler
Roscoe Stanyon
Werner Schempp
Maika Malig
Oronzo Capozzi
Mariano Rocchi
Stefania Purgato
John Huddleston
Giovanni Perini
Tolomeo, Doron
Capozzi, Oronzo
Stanyon, Roscoe R.
Archidiacono, Nicoletta
D'Addabbo, Pietro
Catacchio, Claudia R.
Purgato, Stefania
Perini, Giovanni
Schempp, Werner
Huddleston, John
Malig, Maika
Eichler, Evan E.
Rocchi, Mariano
Source :
Scientific Reports
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2017.

Abstract

Most evolutionary new centromeres (ENC) are composed of large arrays of satellite DNA and surrounded by segmental duplications. However, the hypothesis is that ENCs are seeded in an anonymous sequence and only over time have acquired the complexity of “normal” centromeres. Up to now evidence to test this hypothesis was lacking. We recently discovered that the well-known polymorphism of orangutan chromosome 12 was due to the presence of an ENC. We sequenced the genome of an orangutan homozygous for the ENC, and we focused our analysis on the comparison of the ENC domain with respect to its wild type counterpart. No significant variations were found. This finding is the first clear evidence that ENC seedings are epigenetic in nature. The compaction of the ENC domain was found significantly higher than the corresponding WT region and, interestingly, the expression of the only gene embedded in the region was significantly repressed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....423dfe233942f5b07ba1d5fa2dea46d1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/srep41980