Primate segmental duplications: crucibles of evolution, diversity and disease

JA Bailey, EE Eichler - Nature Reviews Genetics, 2006 - nature.com
Nature Reviews Genetics, 2006nature.com
Compared with other mammals, the genomes of humans and other primates show an
enrichment of large, interspersed segmental duplications (SDs) with high levels of sequence
identity. Recent evidence has begun to shed light on the origin of primate SDs, pointing to a
complex interplay of mechanisms and indicating that distinct waves of duplication took place
during primate evolution. There is also evidence for a strong association between
duplication, genomic instability and large-scale chromosomal rearrangements. Exciting new …
Abstract
Compared with other mammals, the genomes of humans and other primates show an enrichment of large, interspersed segmental duplications (SDs) with high levels of sequence identity. Recent evidence has begun to shed light on the origin of primate SDs, pointing to a complex interplay of mechanisms and indicating that distinct waves of duplication took place during primate evolution. There is also evidence for a strong association between duplication, genomic instability and large-scale chromosomal rearrangements. Exciting new findings suggest that SDs have not only created novel primate gene families, but might have also influenced current human genic and phenotypic variation on a previously unappreciated scale. A growing number of examples link natural human genetic variation of these regions to susceptibility to common disease.
nature.com
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果

Google学术搜索按钮

example.edu/paper.pdf
搜索
获取 PDF 文件
引用
References