Human-lineage-specific genomic elements are associated with neurodegenerative disease and APOE transcript usage
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Zhongbo Chen; Zhang, David; Reynolds, Regina H.; Gustavsson, Emil K.; García-Ruiz, Sonia; D'Sa, Karishma; Fairbrother-Browne, Aine; Vandrovcova, Jana; Hardy, John; Houlden, Henry; Gagliano Taliun, Sarah A.; Botía, Juan; Ryten, Mina; Infante Ceberio, Jon
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2021-04-06Derechos
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, http://creativecommons.org/ licenses/by/4.0/.
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Nature Communications 12, 2076 (2021)
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Nature Publishing Group
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Resumen/Abstract
Knowledge of genomic features specific to the human lineage may provide insights into brain-related diseases. We leverage high-depth whole genome sequencing data to generate a combined annotation identifying regions simultaneously depleted for genetic variation (constrained regions) and poorly conserved across primates. We propose that these constrained, non-conserved regions (CNCRs) have been subject to human-specific purifying selection and are enriched for brain-specific elements. We find that CNCRs are depleted from protein-coding genes but enriched within lncRNAs. We demonstrate that per-SNP heritability of a range of brain-relevant phenotypes are enriched within CNCRs. We find that genes implicated in neurological diseases have high CNCR density, including APOE, highlighting an unannotated intron-3 retention event. Using human brain RNA-sequencing data, we show the intron-3-retaining transcript to be more abundant in Alzheimer?s disease with more severe tau and amyloid pathological burden. Thus, we demonstrate potential association of human-lineage-specific sequences in brain development and neurological disease.
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