Circular DNA intermediates in the generation of large human segmental duplications

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Abstract

Background: Duplications of large genomic segments provide genetic diversity in genome evolution. Despite their importance, how these duplications are generated remains uncertain, particularly for distant duplicated genomic segments. Results: Here we provide evidence of the participation of circular DNA intermediates in the single generation of some large human segmental duplications. A specific reversion of sequence order from A-B/C-D to B-A/D-C between duplicated segments and the presence of only microhomologies and short indels at the evolutionary breakpoints suggest a circularization of the donor ancestral locus and an accidental replicative interaction with the acceptor locus. Conclusions: This novel mechanism of random genomic mutation could explain several distant genomic duplications including some of the ones that took place during recent human evolution.

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Chicote, J. U., López-Sánchez, M., Marquès-Bonet, T., Callizo, J., Pérez-Jurado, L. A., & García-España, A. (2020). Circular DNA intermediates in the generation of large human segmental duplications. BMC Genomics, 21(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-020-06998-w

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