The human genome contains thousands of retrocopies, mostly as processed pseudogenes, which were recently shown to be prevalently transcribed. In particular, those specifically acquired in the human lineage are able to modulate gene expression in a manner that contributed to the evolution of human-specific traits. Therefore, knowledge of the human-specific retrocopies that are transcribed or their full-length transcript structure contributes to better understand human genome evolution. In this study, we identified 16 human-specific retrocopies that harbor 50 CpG islands by in silico analysis and showed that 12 were transcribed in normal tissues and cancer cell lines with a variety of expression patterns, including cancer-specific expression. Determination of the structure of the transcripts associated with the retrocopies revealed that none were transcribed from their 50 CpG islands, but rather, from inside the 30 UTR and the nearby 50 flanking region of the retrocopies as well as the promoter of neighboring genes. The multiple forms of the transcripts, such as chimeric and individual transcripts in both the sense and antisense orientation, might have introduced novel post-transcriptional regulation into the genome during human evolution. These results shed light on the potential role of human-specific retrocopies in the evolution of gene regulation and genomic disorders.
CITATION STYLE
Mori, S., Hayashi, M., Inagaki, S., Oshima, T., Tateishi, K., Fujii, H., & Suzuki, S. (2016). Identification of multiple forms of RNA transcripts associated with human-specific retrotransposed gene copies. Genome Biology and Evolution, 8(8), 2288–2296. https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evw156
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