Evolutionarily conserved sequences on human chromosome 21

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Abstract

Comparison of human sequences with the DNA of other mammals is an excellent means of identifying functional elements in the human genome. Here we describe the utility of high-density oligonucleotide arrays as a rapid approach for comparing human sequences with the DNA of multiple species whose sequences are not presently available. High-density arrays representing ∼22.5 Mb of nonrepetitive human chromosome 21 sequence were synthesized and then hybridized with mouse and dog DNA to identify sequences conserved between humans and mice (human-mouse elements) and between humans and dogs (human-dog elements). Our data show that sequence comparison of multiple species provides a powerful empiric method for identifying actively conserved elements in the human genome. A large fraction of these evolutionarily conserved elements are present in regions on chromosome 21 that do not encode known genes.

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Frazer, K. A., Sheehan, J. B., Stokowski, R. P., Chen, X., Hosseini, R., Cheng, J. F., … Patil, N. (2001). Evolutionarily conserved sequences on human chromosome 21. Genome Research, 11(10), 1651–1659. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.198201

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