2017
DOI: 10.1186/s13059-017-1163-9
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The birth of a human-specific neural gene by incomplete duplication and gene fusion

Abstract: BackgroundGene innovation by duplication is a fundamental evolutionary process but is difficult to study in humans due to the large size, high sequence identity, and mosaic nature of segmental duplication blocks. The human-specific gene hydrocephalus-inducing 2, HYDIN2, was generated by a 364 kbp duplication of 79 internal exons of the large ciliary gene HYDIN from chromosome 16q22.2 to chromosome 1q21.1. Because the HYDIN2 locus lacks the ancestral promoter and seven terminal exons of the progenitor gene, we … Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…Restricting the available amount of SRGAP2A by targeting it to the proteasome represents an effective mechanism through which SRGAP2C increases synaptic density and delays maturation. Interestingly, HSGDs have often resulted in the formation of truncated paralogs and several of these truncated HSGDs have recently been implicated in regulating brain development [2][3][4]8,22,23]. This suggests that evolutionary changes affecting levels and patterns of expression not only occurred through modifications in regulators of gene expression at the genomic level [24], but also at the level of protein interactions through the emergence of insoluble proteins.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Restricting the available amount of SRGAP2A by targeting it to the proteasome represents an effective mechanism through which SRGAP2C increases synaptic density and delays maturation. Interestingly, HSGDs have often resulted in the formation of truncated paralogs and several of these truncated HSGDs have recently been implicated in regulating brain development [2][3][4]8,22,23]. This suggests that evolutionary changes affecting levels and patterns of expression not only occurred through modifications in regulators of gene expression at the genomic level [24], but also at the level of protein interactions through the emergence of insoluble proteins.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The gene annotated as NOTCH2NL (Duan et al, 2004) on human genome assembly GRCh37 resides on the q arm of human chromosome 1 in the 1q21.1 locus, which long remained one of the most difficult regions in our genome to assemble due to its highly repetitive nature (Szamalek et al, 2006), (Dennis et al, 2012), (Doggett et al, 2006). The 1q21.1 locus has undergone a number of human lineage-specific rearrangements, including a pericentric inversion (Szamalek et al, 2006) and the creation of new humanspecific gene paralogs, including HYDIN2 (Dougherty et al, 2017) and SRGAP2B (Dennis et al, 2012). Resequencing of the pericentric region of chromosome 1 in a haploid human cell line finally resolved previously unmapped regions and led to a revised assembly of the 1q21.1 locus, which is incorporated in the human genome assembly GRCh38 (Steinberg et al, 2014).…”
Section: Notch2nl Is a Novel Notch-like Gene Uniquely Expressed In Hmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of particular interest are loci where segmental duplications have created entirely new human-specific gene paralogs that are associated with cortical development, such as SRGAP2C (Dennis et al, 2012), (Charrier et al, 2012), ARHGAP11B (Florio et al, 2015) and TBC1D3 (Ju et al, 2016). Interestingly, human-specific duplicated genes are often located within segmental duplications that mediate recurrent rearrangements associated with neurodevelopmental disorders (Stankiewicz and Lupski, 2010) (Florio et al, 2015), (Nuttle et al, 2016), (Popesco et al, 2006), (Dumas et al, 2012), (Dougherty et al, 2017). One region susceptible to these rearrangements lies on human chromosome band 1q21, which was involved in a large pericentric inversion involving considerable gene loss and duplication during human evolution (Szamalek et al, 2006), contains a disproportionate number of human-specific genes , and also contains the 1q21.1 distal deletion/duplication syndrome interval (Mefford et al, 2008), (Brunetti-Pierri et al, 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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