Gene conversion and evolution of Xq28 duplicons involved in recurring inversions causing severe hemophilia A

  1. Richard D. Bagnall1,
  2. Karen L. Ayres2,
  3. Peter M. Green1, and
  4. Francesco Giannelli1,3
  1. 1 Department of Medical and Molecular Genetics, Guy's, King's College and St. Thomas' Hospitals Medical College, King's College, London SE1 9RT, United Kingdom
  2. 2 School of Applied Statistics, University of Reading, Reading RG6 6FN, United Kingdom

Abstract

Inversions breaking the 1041 bp int1h-1 or the 9.5-kb int22h-1 sequence of the F8 gene cause hemophilia A in 1/30,000 males. These inversions are due to homologous recombination between the above sequences and their inverted copies on the same DNA molecule, respectively, int1h-2 and int22h-2 or int22h-3. We find that (1) int1h and int22h duplicated more than 25 million years ago; (2) the identity of the copies (>99%) of these sequences in humans and other primates is due to gene conversion; (3) gene conversion is most frequent in the internal regions of int22h; (4) breakpoints of int22h-related inversions also tend to involve the internal regions of int22h; (5) sequence variations in a sample of human X chromosomes defined eight haplotypes of int22h-1 and 27 of int22h-2 plus int22h-3; (6) the latter two sequences, which lie, respectively, 500 and 600 kb telomeric to int22h-1 are five-fold more identical when in cis than when in trans, thus suggesting that gene conversion may be predominantly intrachromosomal; (7) int1h, int22h, and flanking sequences evolved at a rate of about 0.1% substitutions per million years during the divergence between humans and other primates, except for int1h during the human-chimpanzee divergence, when its rate of evolution was significantly lower. This is reminiscent of the slower evolution of palindrome arms in the male specific regions of the Y chromosome and we propose, as an explanation, that intrachromosomal gene conversion and cosegregation of the duplicated regions favors retention of the ancestral sequence and thus reduces the evolution rate.

Footnotes

  • [Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org. The sequence data from this study have been submitted to GenBank under accession nos. AY619998-AY620001 and AY781298-AY781308.]

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.2946205.

  • 3 Corresponding author. E-mail francesco.giannelli{at}genetics.kcl.ac.uk; fax 02071882585.

    • Accepted November 23, 2004.
    • Received June 29, 2004.
| Table of Contents

Preprint Server