Analysis of 62 hybrid assembled human Y chromosomes exposes rapid structural changes and high rates of gene conversion.

The human Y-chromosome does not recombine across its male-specific part and is therefore an excellent marker of human migrations. It also plays an important role in male fertility. However, its evolution is difficult to fully understand because of repetitive sequences, inverted repeats and the poten...

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Main Authors: Laurits Skov, Danish Pan Genome Consortium, Mikkel Heide Schierup
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-08-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5591018?pdf=render
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author Laurits Skov
Danish Pan Genome Consortium
Mikkel Heide Schierup
author_facet Laurits Skov
Danish Pan Genome Consortium
Mikkel Heide Schierup
author_sort Laurits Skov
collection DOAJ
description The human Y-chromosome does not recombine across its male-specific part and is therefore an excellent marker of human migrations. It also plays an important role in male fertility. However, its evolution is difficult to fully understand because of repetitive sequences, inverted repeats and the potentially large role of gene conversion. Here we perform an evolutionary analysis of 62 Y-chromosomes of Danish descent sequenced using a wide range of library insert sizes and high coverage, thus allowing large regions of these chromosomes to be well assembled. These include 17 father-son pairs, which we use to validate variation calling. Using a recent method that can integrate variants based on both mapping and de novo assembly, we genotype 10898 SNVs and 2903 indels (max length of 27241 bp) in our sample and show by father-son concordance and experimental validation that the non-recurrent SNP and indel variation on the Y chromosome tree is called very accurately. This includes variation called in a 0.9 Mb centromeric heterochromatic region, which is by far the most variable in the Y chromosome. Among the variation is also longer sequence-stretches not present in the reference genome but shared with the chimpanzee Y chromosome. We analyzed 2.7 Mb of large inverted repeats (palindromes) for variation patterns among the two palindrome arms and identified 603 mutation and 416 gene conversions events. We find clear evidence for GC-biased gene conversion in the palindromes (and a balancing AT mutation bias), but irrespective of this, also a strong bias towards gene conversion towards the ancestral state, suggesting that palindromic gene conversion may alleviate Muller's ratchet. Finally, we also find a large number of large-scale gene duplications and deletions in the palindromic regions (at least 24) and find that such events can consist of complex combinations of simultaneous insertions and deletions of long stretches of the Y chromosome.
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spelling doaj.art-7bee66cac07d4fc2a41b3103b2d540b52022-12-21T20:30:47ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042017-08-01138e100683410.1371/journal.pgen.1006834Analysis of 62 hybrid assembled human Y chromosomes exposes rapid structural changes and high rates of gene conversion.Laurits SkovDanish Pan Genome ConsortiumMikkel Heide SchierupThe human Y-chromosome does not recombine across its male-specific part and is therefore an excellent marker of human migrations. It also plays an important role in male fertility. However, its evolution is difficult to fully understand because of repetitive sequences, inverted repeats and the potentially large role of gene conversion. Here we perform an evolutionary analysis of 62 Y-chromosomes of Danish descent sequenced using a wide range of library insert sizes and high coverage, thus allowing large regions of these chromosomes to be well assembled. These include 17 father-son pairs, which we use to validate variation calling. Using a recent method that can integrate variants based on both mapping and de novo assembly, we genotype 10898 SNVs and 2903 indels (max length of 27241 bp) in our sample and show by father-son concordance and experimental validation that the non-recurrent SNP and indel variation on the Y chromosome tree is called very accurately. This includes variation called in a 0.9 Mb centromeric heterochromatic region, which is by far the most variable in the Y chromosome. Among the variation is also longer sequence-stretches not present in the reference genome but shared with the chimpanzee Y chromosome. We analyzed 2.7 Mb of large inverted repeats (palindromes) for variation patterns among the two palindrome arms and identified 603 mutation and 416 gene conversions events. We find clear evidence for GC-biased gene conversion in the palindromes (and a balancing AT mutation bias), but irrespective of this, also a strong bias towards gene conversion towards the ancestral state, suggesting that palindromic gene conversion may alleviate Muller's ratchet. Finally, we also find a large number of large-scale gene duplications and deletions in the palindromic regions (at least 24) and find that such events can consist of complex combinations of simultaneous insertions and deletions of long stretches of the Y chromosome.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5591018?pdf=render
spellingShingle Laurits Skov
Danish Pan Genome Consortium
Mikkel Heide Schierup
Analysis of 62 hybrid assembled human Y chromosomes exposes rapid structural changes and high rates of gene conversion.
PLoS Genetics
title Analysis of 62 hybrid assembled human Y chromosomes exposes rapid structural changes and high rates of gene conversion.
title_full Analysis of 62 hybrid assembled human Y chromosomes exposes rapid structural changes and high rates of gene conversion.
title_fullStr Analysis of 62 hybrid assembled human Y chromosomes exposes rapid structural changes and high rates of gene conversion.
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of 62 hybrid assembled human Y chromosomes exposes rapid structural changes and high rates of gene conversion.
title_short Analysis of 62 hybrid assembled human Y chromosomes exposes rapid structural changes and high rates of gene conversion.
title_sort analysis of 62 hybrid assembled human y chromosomes exposes rapid structural changes and high rates of gene conversion
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5591018?pdf=render
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AT danishpangenomeconsortium analysisof62hybridassembledhumanychromosomesexposesrapidstructuralchangesandhighratesofgeneconversion
AT mikkelheideschierup analysisof62hybridassembledhumanychromosomesexposesrapidstructuralchangesandhighratesofgeneconversion