• Title/Summary/Keyword: human and chimpanzee genome

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Formation of a New Solo-LTR of the Human Endogenous Retrovirus H Family in Human Chromosome 21

  • Huh, Jae-Won;Kim, Dae-Soo;Ha, Hong-Seok;Kim, Tae-Hong;Kim, Wook;Kim, Heui-Soo
    • Molecules and Cells
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    • v.22 no.3
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    • pp.360-363
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    • 2006
  • Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) contribute to various kinds of genomic instability via rearrangement and retrotransposition events. In the present study the formation of a new human-specific solo-LTR belonging to the HERV-H family (AP001667; chromosome 21q21) was detected by a comparative analysis of human chromosome 21 and chimpanzee chromosome 22. The solo-LTR was formed as a result of an equal homologous recombination excision event. Several evolutionary processes have occurred at this locus during primate evolution, indicating that mammalian-wide interspersed repeat (MIR) and full-length HERV-H elements integrated into hominoid genomes after the divergence of Old World monkeys and hominoids, and that the solo-LTR element was created by recombination excision of the HERV-H only in the human genome.

Phylogenetic Analysis of HERV-K LTR Family in Human Chromosome Xq26 and New World Monkeys

  • Kim, Heui-Soo;Park, Joo-Young;Lee, Won-Ho;Jang, Kyung-Lib;Park, Won-Hyuck;Moon, Doo-Ho;Osamu Takenaka;Hyun, Byung-Hwa
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.32-36
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    • 2000
  • Solitary long terminal repeats(LTRs) of human endogenous retrovirus K family(HERV-K) have been found to be coexpressed with sequences of closely located genes. It has been suggested that HERV-K LTR-like elements entered the primate genome approximately 33-40 million years ago. WE investigated the presence of HERV-K LTR elements in New World monkeys using PCR amplification. Six LTR elements of HERV-K family were identified from New World monkeys, represented by the squirrel and night monkeys. They showed a high degree of sequence homology(96-99%) with the human-specific HERV-K LTR elements. Phylogenetic analysis reveals that an LTR element (SM-1) from the squirrel monkey and another LTR element (NM-1) from the night monkey are very closely related to the human-specific HERV-K LTR elements with low degree of divergence. This finding suggests that some of LTR elements of HERV-K family have recently been proliferated in New World monkeys. A sequence in chromosome Xq26(AL034407) \ulcorner contains an HERV-K LTR element was shown to be present in the human genome, but is absent in the bonobo, chimpanzee, gorilla, orangutan, and gibbon. It has more than 99% homology to other human-specific HERV-K LTR elements. This sequence thus represents and isolated insertion of an evolving class of elements that may have made a particular contribution to human genomic plasticity.

Molecular Characterization of the HERV-W Env Gene in Humans and Primates: Expression, FISH, Phylogeny, and Evolution

  • Kim, Heui-Soo;Kim, Dae-Soo;Huh, Jae-Won;Ahn, Kung;Yi, Joo-Mi;Lee, Ja-Rang;Hirai, Hirohisa
    • Molecules and Cells
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    • v.26 no.1
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    • pp.53-60
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    • 2008
  • We characterized the human endogenous retrovirus (HERV-W) family in humans and primates. In silico expression data indicated that 22 complete HERV-W families from human chromosomes 1-3, 5-8, 10-12, 15, 19, and X are randomly expressed in various tissues. Quantitative real-time RT-PCR analysis of the HERV-W env gene derived from human chromosome 7q21.2 indicated predominant expression in the human placenta. Several copies of repeat sequences (SINE, LINE, LTR, simple repeat) were detected within the complete or processed pseudo HERV-W of the human, chimpanzee, and rhesus monkey. Compared to other regions (5'LTR, Gag, Gag-Pol, Env, 3'LTR), the repeat family has been mainly integrated into the region spanning the 5'LTRs of Gag (1398 bp) and Pol (3242 bp). FISH detected the HERV-W probe (fosWE1) derived from a gorilla fosmid library in the metaphase chromosomes of all primates (five hominoids, three Old World monkeys, two New World monkeys, and one prosimian), but not in Tupaia. This finding was supported by molecular clock and phylogeny data using the divergence values of the complete HERV-W LTR elements. The data suggested that the HERV-W family was integrated into the primate genome approximately 63 million years (Myr) ago, and evolved independently during the course of primate radiation.

Molecular Characterization and Expression Patterns of Porcine Eukaryotic Elongation Factor 1 A

  • Wang, H.L.;Wang, H.;Zhu, Z.M.;Yang, S.L.;Fen, S.T.;Li, Kui
    • Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
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    • v.19 no.7
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    • pp.953-957
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    • 2006
  • The eukaryotic elongation factor 1 A (EEF1A) participates in protein synthesis by forming the eEF1A GTP tRNA complex to deliver aminoacyl-tRNA to the A site of ribosomes. This study described cDNA sequences and partial genomic structure of porcine EEF1A1. The porcine EEF1A1 gene encoded a protein with 462 amino acids, which shared complete homology with human, chimpanzee and dog. The temporal expression pattern showed the diversity of EEF1A1 level in mRNA was relatively minor in prenatal embryo skeletal muscle, however, the expression decreased during aging after birth in skeletal muscle of the Chinese Tongcheng pig. The spatial expression patterns indicated that the gene expressed in skeletal muscle, heart, lung, liver, kidney, fat and spleen. In addition, we assigned the gene to porcine chromosome 1 using a radiation hybrid panel.

Chromosome 22 LD Map Comparison between Korean and Other Populations

  • Lee, Jong-Eun;Jang, Hye-Yoon;Kim, Sook;Yoo, Yeon-Kyeong;Hwang, Jung-Joo;Jun, Hyo-Jung;Lee, Kyu-Sang;Son, Ok-Kyung;Yang, Jun-Mo;Ahn, Kwang-Sung;Kim, Eug-Ene;Lee, Hye-Won;Song, Kyu-Young;Kim, Hie-Lim;Lee, Seong-Gene;Yoon, Yong-Sook;Kimm, Ku-Chan;Han, Bok-Ghee;Oh, Berm-Seok;Kim, Chang-Bae;Jin, Hoon;Choi, Kyoung-O.;Kang, Hyo-Jin;Kim, Young-J.
    • Genomics & Informatics
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    • v.6 no.1
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    • pp.18-28
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    • 2008
  • Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are the most abundant forms of human genetic variations and resources for mapping complex genetic traits and disease association studies. We have constructed a linkage disequilibrium (LD) map of chromosome 22 in Korean samples and compared it with those of other populations, including Yorubans in Ibadan, Nigeria (YRI), Centre d'Etude du Polymorphisme Humain (CEPH) reference families (CEU), Japanese in Tokyo (JPT) and Han Chinese in Beijing (CHB) in the HapMap database. We genotyped 4681 of 111,448 publicly available SNPs in 90 unrelated Koreans. Among genotyped SNPs, 4167 were polymorphic. Three hundred and five LD blocks were constructed to make up 18.6% (6.4 of 34.5 Mb) of chromosome 22 with 757 tagSNPs and 815 haplotypes (frequency $\geq$ 5.0%). Of 3430 common SNPs genotyped in all five populations, 514 were monomorphic in Koreans. The CHB + JPT samples have more than a 72% overlap with the monomorphic SNPs in Koreans, while the CEU + YRI samples have less than a 38% overlap. The patterns of hot spots and LD blocks were dispersed throughout chromosome 22, with some common blocks among populations, highly concordant between the three Asian samples. Analysis of the distribution of chimpanzee-derived allele frequency (DAF), a measure of genetic differentiation, Fst levels, and allele frequency difference (AFD) among Koreans and the HapMap samples showed a strong correlation between the Asians, while the CEU and YRI samples showed a very weak correlation with Korean samples. Relative distance as a quantitative measurement based upon DAF, Fst, and AFD indicated that all three Asian samples are very proximate, while CEU and YRI are significantly remote from the Asian samples. Comparative genome-wide LD studies provide useful information on the association studies of complex diseases.