Molecular and evolutionary characteristics of the fraction of human alpha satellite DNA associated with CENP-A at the centromeres of chromosomes 1, 5, 19, and 21

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The mode of evolution of the highly homogeneous Higher-Order-Repeat-containing alpha satellite arrays is still subject to discussion. This is also true of the CENP-A associated repeats where the centromere is formed.</p> <p&...

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Main Authors: Roizès Gérard, Puechberty Jacques, Pironon Nathalie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2010-03-01
Series:BMC Genomics
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/11/195
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spelling doaj-edd3b2c6fe844ec6baf802814a78f8252020-11-24T21:12:03ZengBMCBMC Genomics1471-21642010-03-0111119510.1186/1471-2164-11-195Molecular and evolutionary characteristics of the fraction of human alpha satellite DNA associated with CENP-A at the centromeres of chromosomes 1, 5, 19, and 21Roizès GérardPuechberty JacquesPironon Nathalie<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The mode of evolution of the highly homogeneous Higher-Order-Repeat-containing alpha satellite arrays is still subject to discussion. This is also true of the CENP-A associated repeats where the centromere is formed.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In this paper, we show that the molecular mechanisms by which these arrays evolve are identical in multiple chromosomes: i) accumulation of crossovers that homogenise and expand the arrays into different domains and subdomains that are mostly unshared between homologues and ii) sporadic mutations and conversion events that simultaneously differentiate them from one another. Individual arrays are affected by these mechanisms to different extents that presumably increase with time. Repeats associated with CENP-A, where the centromere is formed, are subjected to the same evolutionary mechanisms, but constitute minor subsets that exhibit subtle sequence differences from those of the bulk repeats. While the DNA sequence <it>per se </it>is not essential for centromere localisation along an array, it appears that certain sequences can be selected against. On chromosomes 1 and 19, which are more affected by the above evolutionary mechanisms than are chromosomes 21 and 5, CENP-A associated repeats were also recovered from a second homogeneous array present on each chromosome. This could be a way for chromosomes to sustain mitosis and meiosis when the normal centromere locus is ineluctably undermined by the above mechanisms.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We discuss, in light of these observations, possible scenarios for the normal evolutionary fates of human centromeric regions.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/11/195
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roizès Gérard
Puechberty Jacques
Pironon Nathalie
spellingShingle Roizès Gérard
Puechberty Jacques
Pironon Nathalie
Molecular and evolutionary characteristics of the fraction of human alpha satellite DNA associated with CENP-A at the centromeres of chromosomes 1, 5, 19, and 21
BMC Genomics
author_facet Roizès Gérard
Puechberty Jacques
Pironon Nathalie
author_sort Roizès Gérard
title Molecular and evolutionary characteristics of the fraction of human alpha satellite DNA associated with CENP-A at the centromeres of chromosomes 1, 5, 19, and 21
title_short Molecular and evolutionary characteristics of the fraction of human alpha satellite DNA associated with CENP-A at the centromeres of chromosomes 1, 5, 19, and 21
title_full Molecular and evolutionary characteristics of the fraction of human alpha satellite DNA associated with CENP-A at the centromeres of chromosomes 1, 5, 19, and 21
title_fullStr Molecular and evolutionary characteristics of the fraction of human alpha satellite DNA associated with CENP-A at the centromeres of chromosomes 1, 5, 19, and 21
title_full_unstemmed Molecular and evolutionary characteristics of the fraction of human alpha satellite DNA associated with CENP-A at the centromeres of chromosomes 1, 5, 19, and 21
title_sort molecular and evolutionary characteristics of the fraction of human alpha satellite dna associated with cenp-a at the centromeres of chromosomes 1, 5, 19, and 21
publisher BMC
series BMC Genomics
issn 1471-2164
publishDate 2010-03-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The mode of evolution of the highly homogeneous Higher-Order-Repeat-containing alpha satellite arrays is still subject to discussion. This is also true of the CENP-A associated repeats where the centromere is formed.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In this paper, we show that the molecular mechanisms by which these arrays evolve are identical in multiple chromosomes: i) accumulation of crossovers that homogenise and expand the arrays into different domains and subdomains that are mostly unshared between homologues and ii) sporadic mutations and conversion events that simultaneously differentiate them from one another. Individual arrays are affected by these mechanisms to different extents that presumably increase with time. Repeats associated with CENP-A, where the centromere is formed, are subjected to the same evolutionary mechanisms, but constitute minor subsets that exhibit subtle sequence differences from those of the bulk repeats. While the DNA sequence <it>per se </it>is not essential for centromere localisation along an array, it appears that certain sequences can be selected against. On chromosomes 1 and 19, which are more affected by the above evolutionary mechanisms than are chromosomes 21 and 5, CENP-A associated repeats were also recovered from a second homogeneous array present on each chromosome. This could be a way for chromosomes to sustain mitosis and meiosis when the normal centromere locus is ineluctably undermined by the above mechanisms.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We discuss, in light of these observations, possible scenarios for the normal evolutionary fates of human centromeric regions.</p>
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/11/195
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