Probabilistic whole-genome alignments reveal high indel rates in the human and mouse genomes

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Abstract

Motivation: The two mutation processes that have the largest impact on genome evolution at small scales are substitutions, and sequence insertions and deletions (indels). While the former have been studied extensively, indels have received less attention, and in particular, the problem of inferring indel rates between pairs of divergent sequence remains unsolved. Here, I describe a novel and accurate method for estimating neutral indel rates between divergent pairs of genomes. Results: Simulations suggest that new method for estimating indel rates is accurate to within 2%, at divergences corresponding to that of human and mouse. Applying the method to these species, I show that indel rates are up to twice higher than is apparent from alignments, and depend strongly on the local G+C content. These results indicate that at these evolutionary distances, the contribution of indels to sequence divergence is much larger than hitherto appreciated. In particular, the ratio of substitution to indel rates between human and mouse appears to be around γ=8, rather than the currently accepted value of about γ=14. © 2007 The Author(s).

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Lunter, G. (2007). Probabilistic whole-genome alignments reveal high indel rates in the human and mouse genomes. In Bioinformatics (Vol. 23). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btm185

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