2016
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-016-3241-x
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Short tandem repeats, segmental duplications, gene deletion, and genomic instability in a rapidly diversified immune gene family

Abstract: BackgroundGenomic regions with repetitive sequences are considered unstable and prone to swift DNA diversification processes. A highly diverse immune gene family of the sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus), called Sp185/333, is composed of clustered genes with similar sequence as well as several types of repeats ranging in size from short tandem repeats (STRs) to large segmental duplications. This repetitive structure may have been the basis for the incorrect assembly of this gene family in the sea urchi… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(97 citation statements)
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“…Such motifs have been associated with genomic instability in several previous studies (Bacolla & Wells, ; Boyer, Grgurevic, Cazaux, & Hoffmann, ; Chen et al, ; Madireddy & Gerhardt, ; Oren et al, ; Wang & Vasquez, ; Wells, ; Wojciechowska, Napierala, Larson, & Wells, ; Zhao, Bacolla, Wang, & Vasquez, ). In particular, STRs, and IRs (including palindromic or potential cruciform forming sequences) have been found to be enriched near recurrent and nonrecurrent deletion CNV breakpoints (Akgun et al, ; Chen et al, ; Oren et al, ). We investigated RepX‐i1010 and the GI‐hotspot for seven non‐B DNA motifs including G‐Quadruplex forming sequences, STRs, A‐phased repeats, mirror repeats (MR), IRs, direct repeats (DRs), and Z‐DNA forming sequences (Cer et al, ; Wells, ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…Such motifs have been associated with genomic instability in several previous studies (Bacolla & Wells, ; Boyer, Grgurevic, Cazaux, & Hoffmann, ; Chen et al, ; Madireddy & Gerhardt, ; Oren et al, ; Wang & Vasquez, ; Wells, ; Wojciechowska, Napierala, Larson, & Wells, ; Zhao, Bacolla, Wang, & Vasquez, ). In particular, STRs, and IRs (including palindromic or potential cruciform forming sequences) have been found to be enriched near recurrent and nonrecurrent deletion CNV breakpoints (Akgun et al, ; Chen et al, ; Oren et al, ). We investigated RepX‐i1010 and the GI‐hotspot for seven non‐B DNA motifs including G‐Quadruplex forming sequences, STRs, A‐phased repeats, mirror repeats (MR), IRs, direct repeats (DRs), and Z‐DNA forming sequences (Cer et al, ; Wells, ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…The fidelity of nearly all DNA processing steps can be compromised by slippage and other errors linked to repetitive sequences (López Castel, Cleary, & Pearson, 2010). Consequently, repeats can mutate by addition or loss of their unit nucleotide sequence up to 100000 times more frequently than point mutations in nonrepetitive regions (Oren et al, 2016). The variation in tandem repeat numbers for Muc1 and other mucins in humans and mammals provides an evolutionary argument that these genomic DNAs may be mutational hotspots (Gemayel, Vinces, Legendre, & Verstrepen, 2010).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…10). First, the genes make up a family of tightly clustered genes that appear to undergo duplications and deletions (9,23) plus some preliminary evidence of recombination within the tandem repeats in the second exon ( Fig. 1A) (24).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%