학술논문

The sequence and analysis of duplication rich human chromosome 16
Document Type
article
Author
Martin, JoelHan, CliffGordon, Laurie A.Terry, AstridPrabhakar, ShyamShe, XinweiXie, GaryHellsten, UffeMan Chan, YeeAltherr, MichaelCouronne, OlivierAerts, AndreaBajorek, EvaBlack, StaceyBlumer, HeatherBranscomb, ElbertBrown, Nancy C.Bruno, William J.Buckingham, Judith M.Callen, David F.Campbell, Connie S.Campbell, Mary L.Campbell, Evelyn W.Caoile, ChenierChallacombe, Jean F.Chasteen, Leslie A.Chertkov, OlgaChi, Han C.Christensen, MariClark, Lynn M.Cohn, Judith D.Denys, MirianDetter, John C.Dickson, MarkDimitrijevic-Bussod, MiraEscobar, JulioFawcett, Joseph J.Flowers, DaveFotopulos, DeaGlavina, TijanaGomez, MariaGonzales, EidelynGoodstein, DavidGoodwin, Lynne A.Grady, Deborah L.Grigoriev, IgorGroza, MatthewHammon, NancyHawkins, TrevorHaydu, LaurenHildebrand, Carl E.Huang, WayneIsrani, SanjayJett, JamieJewett, Phillip E.Kadner, KristenKimball, HeatherKobayashi, ArthurKrawczyk, Marie-ClaudeLeyba, TinaLongmire, Jonathan L.Lopez, FrederickLou, YunianLowry, SteveLudeman, ThomMark, Graham A.Mcmurray, Kimberly L.Meincke, Linda J.Morgan, JennaMoyzis, Robert K.Mundt, Mark O.Munk, A. ChristineNandkeshwar, Richard D.Pitluck, SamPollard, MartinPredki, PaulParson-Quintana, BeverlyRamirez, LuciaRash, SamRetterer, JamesRicke, Darryl O.Robinson, Donna L.Rodriguez, AlexSalamov, AsafSaunders, Elizabeth H.Scott, DuncanShough, TimothyStallings, Raymond L.Stalvey, MalindaSutherland, Robert D.Tapia, RoxanneTesmer, Judith G.Thayer, NinaThompson, Linda S.Tice, HopeTorney, David C.Tran-Gyamfi, MaryTsai, MingUlanovsky, Levy E.Ustaszewska, Anna
Source
Subject
Applied life sciences
Language
Abstract
We report here the 78,884,754 base pairs of finished human chromosome 16 sequence, representing over 99.9 percent of its euchromatin. Manual annotation revealed 880 protein coding genes confirmed by 1,637 aligned transcripts, 19 tRNA genes, 341 pseudogenes and 3 RNA pseudogenes. These genes include metallothionein, cadherin and iroquois gene families, as well as the disease genes for polycystic kidney disease and acute myelomonocytic leukemia. Several large-scale structural polymorphisms spanning hundreds of kilobasepairs were identified and result in gene content differences across humans. One of the unique features of chromosome 16 is its high level of segmental duplication, ranked among the highest of the human autosomes. While the segmental duplications are enriched in the relatively gene poor pericentromere of the p-arm, some are involved in recent gene duplication and conversion events which are likely to have had an impact on the evolution of primates and human disease susceptibility.