Complex Loci in Human and Mouse Genomes

Pär G. Engström(Karolinska Institutet), Harukazu Suzuki(RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences), Noriko Ninomiya(RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences), Altuna Akalin(University of Bergen), Luca Sessa(Dulbecco Telethon Institute), G Lavorgna(San Raffaele University of Rome), Alessandro Brozzi(IFOM), Lucilla Luzi(IFOM), Sin Lam Tan(Institute for Infocomm Research), Liang Yang(Institute for Infocomm Research), Galih Kunarso(National University of Singapore), Edwin Lian-Chong Ng(Nanyang Polytechnic), Serge Batalov(Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation), Claes Wahlestedt(Scripps Institution of Oceanography), Chikatoshi Kai(RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences), Jun Kawai(Wako University), Piero Carninci(Wako University), Yoshihide Hayashizaki(Wako University), Christine A. Wells(Griffith University), Vladimir B. Bajić(Institute for Infocomm Research), Valerio Orlando(Dulbecco Telethon Institute), James F. Reid(IFOM), Boris Lenhard(Karolinska Institutet), Leonard Lipovich(Genome Institute of Singapore)
PLoS Genetics
April 20, 2006
Cited by 299Open Access
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Abstract

Mammalian genomes harbor a larger than expected number of complex loci, in which multiple genes are coupled by shared transcribed regions in antisense orientation and/or by bidirectional core promoters. To determine the incidence, functional significance, and evolutionary context of mammalian complex loci, we identified and characterized 5,248 cis-antisense pairs, 1,638 bidirectional promoters, and 1,153 chains of multiple cis-antisense and/or bidirectionally promoted pairs from 36,606 mouse transcriptional units (TUs), along with 6,141 cis-antisense pairs, 2,113 bidirectional promoters, and 1,480 chains from 42,887 human TUs. In both human and mouse, 25% of TUs resided in cis-antisense pairs, only 17% of which were conserved between the two organisms, indicating frequent species specificity of antisense gene arrangements. A sampling approach indicated that over 40% of all TUs might actually be in cis-antisense pairs, and that only a minority of these arrangements are likely to be conserved between human and mouse. Bidirectional promoters were characterized by variable transcriptional start sites and an identifiable midpoint at which overall sequence composition changed strand and the direction of transcriptional initiation switched. In microarray data covering a wide range of mouse tissues, genes in cis-antisense and bidirectionally promoted arrangement showed a higher probability of being coordinately expressed than random pairs of genes. In a case study on homeotic loci, we observed extensive transcription of nonconserved sequences on the noncoding strand, implying that the presence rather than the sequence of these transcripts is of functional importance. Complex loci are ubiquitous, host numerous nonconserved gene structures and lineage-specific exonification events, and may have a cis-regulatory impact on the member genes.


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