Characterization of the human lineage-specific pericentric inversion that distinguishes human chromosome 1 from the homologous chromosomes of the great apes.

Bibliographic Collection: 
MOCA Reference, APE
Publication Type: Journal Article
Authors: Szamalek, Justyna M; Goidts, Violaine; Cooper, David N; Hameister, Horst; Kehrer-Sawatzki, Hildegard
Year of Publication: 2006
Journal: Hum Genet
Volume: 120
Issue: 1
Pagination: 126-38
Date Published: 2006 Aug
Publication Language: eng
ISSN: 0340-6717
Keywords: Animals, Cell Line, Cell Lineage, Centromere, Chromosome Breakage, Chromosome Inversion, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 1, Evolution, Molecular, Humans, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence, Karyotyping, Pan troglodytes, Synteny
Abstract:

The human and chimpanzee genomes are distinguishable in terms of ten gross karyotypic differences including nine pericentric inversions and a chromosomal fusion. Seven of these large pericentric inversions are chimpanzee-specific whereas two of them, involving human chromosomes 1 and 18, were fixed in the human lineage after the divergence of humans and chimpanzees. We have performed detailed molecular and computational characterization of the breakpoint regions of the human-specific inversion of chromosome 1. FISH analysis and sequence comparisons together revealed that the pericentromeric region of HSA 1 contains numerous segmental duplications that display a high degree of sequence similarity between both chromosomal arms. Detailed analysis of these regions has allowed us to refine the p-arm breakpoint region to a 154.2 kb interval at 1p11.2 and the q-arm breakpoint region to a 562.6 kb interval at 1q21.1. Both breakpoint regions contain human-specific segmental duplications arranged in inverted orientation. We therefore propose that the pericentric inversion of HSA 1 was mediated by intra-chromosomal non-homologous recombination between these highly homologous segmental duplications that had themselves arisen only recently in the human lineage by duplicative transposition.

DOI: 10.1007/s00439-006-0209-y
Alternate Journal: Hum. Genet.