Independent intrachromosomal recombination events underlie the pericentric inversions of chimpanzee and gorilla chromosomes homologous to human chromosome 16
- Violaine Goidts1,
- Justyna M. Szamalek1,
- Pieter J. de Jong2,
- David N. Cooper3,
- Nadia Chuzhanova3,4,
- Horst Hameister1, and
- Hildegard Kehrer-Sawatzki1,5
- 1 Department of Human Genetics, University of Ulm, 89081 Ulm, Germany
- 2 Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute, Oakland, California 94609, USA
- 3 Institute of Medical Genetics, Cardiff University, Heath Park, Cardiff, CF14 4XN, United Kingdom
- 4 Biostatistics and Bioinformatics Unit, Cardiff University, Heath Park, Cardiff, CF14 4XN, United Kingdom
Abstract
Analyses of chromosomal rearrangements that have occurred during the evolution of the hominoids can reveal much about the mutational mechanisms underlying primate chromosome evolution. We characterized the breakpoints of the pericentric inversion of chimpanzee chromosome 18 (PTR XVI), which is homologous to human chromosome 16 (HSA 16). A conserved 23-kb inverted repeat composed of satellites, LINE and Alu elements was identified near the breakpoints and could have mediated the inversion by bringing the chromosomal arms into close proximity with each other, thereby facilitating intrachromosomal recombination. The exact positions of the breakpoints may then have been determined by local DNA sequence homologies between the inversion breakpoints, including a 22-base pair direct repeat. The similarly located pericentric inversion of gorilla (GGO) chromosome XVI, was studied by FISH and PCR analysis. The p- and q-arm breakpoints of the inversions in PTR XVI and GGO XVI were found to occur at slightly different locations, consistent with their independent origin. Further, FISH studies of the homologous chromosomal regions in macaque and orangutan revealed that the region represented by HSA BAC RP11-696P19, which spans the inversion breakpoint on HSA 16q11-12, was derived from the ancestral primate chromosome homologous to HSA 1. After the divergence of orangutan from the other great apes ∼12 million years ago (Mya), a duplication of the corresponding region occurred followed by its interchromosomal transposition to the ancestral chromosome 16q. Thus, the most parsimonious interpretation is that the gorilla and chimpanzee homologs exhibit similar but nonidentical derived pericentric inversions, whereas HSA 16 represents the ancestral form among hominoids.
Footnotes
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[Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org. The sequence data from this study have been submitted to GenBank under accession nos. AY822675, AY822676, and AY822677.]
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Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.3732505.
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↵5 Corresponding author. E-mail hildegard.kehrer-sawatzki{at}medizin.uni-ulm.de; fax 49 731 5002-3438.
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- Accepted April 5, 2005.
- Received January 21, 2005.
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press











