![]() |
| Pavel Pevzner |
SAN DIEGO — The
fragile regions in mammalian genomes that are thought to play a key
role in evolution go through a "birth and death" process, according to
new bioinformatics research performed at the University of California,
San Diego. The new work, published today (Nov. 30) in the journal Genome Biology, could help researchers identify the current fragile
regions in the human genome — information that may reveal how the human
genome will evolve in the future.
“The genomic architecture of every species on Earth changes on the
evolutionary time scale and humans are not an exception. What will be
the next big change in the human genome remains unknown, but our
approach could be useful in determining where in the human genome those
changes may occur,” said Pavel Pevzner, a UC San Diego computer science
professor and an author on the new study. Pevzner studies genomes and
genome evolution from a computational perspective in the Department of
Computer Science and Engineering at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of
Engineering.
The fragile regions of genomes are prone to “genomic earthquakes” that
can trigger chromosome rearrangements, disrupt genes, alter gene
regulation and otherwise play an important role in genome evolution and
the emergence of new species. For example, humans have 23 chromosomes
while some other apes have 24 chromosomes, a consequence of a genome
rearrangement that fused two chromosomes in our ape ancestor into human
chromosome 2.
This work was performed by Pevzner and Max Alekseyev — a computer
scientist who recently finished his Ph.D. in the Department of Computer
Science and Engineering at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of
Engineering. Alekseyev is now a computer science professor at the
University of South Carolina.
Turnover Fragile Breakage Model
“The main conclusion of the new paper is that these fragile regions are moving,” said Pevzner.
In 2003, Pevzner and UC San Diego mathematics professor Glen Tesler
published results claiming that genomes have “fault zones” or genomic
regions that are more prone to rearrangements than other regions. Their
“Fragile Breakage Model” countered the then largely accepted “Random
Breakage Model,” which implies that there are no rearrangement
hotspots in mammalian genomes. While the Fragile Breakage Model has
been supported by many studies in the last seven years, the precise
locations of fragile regions in the human genome remain elusive.
The new work published in Genome Biology offers an update
to the Fragile Breakage Model called the “Turnover Fragile Breakage
Model.” The findings demonstrate that the fragile regions undergo a
birth and death process over evolutionary timescales and provide a clue
to where the fragile regions in the human genome are located.
Do the math: Find fragile regions
Finding the fragile regions within genomes is akin to looking at a
mixed up deck of cards and trying to determine how many times it has
been shuffled.
Looking at a genome, you may identify breaks, but to say it is a
fragile region, you have to know that breaks occurred more than once at
the same genomic position. “We are figuring out which regions underwent
multiple genome earthquakes by analyzing the present-day genomes that
survived these earthquakes that happened millions of years ago. The
notion of rearrangements cannot be applied to a single genome at a
single point in time. It’s relevant when looking at more than one
genome,” said Pevzner, explaining the comparative genomics approach
they took.
“It was noticed that while fragile regions may be shared across
different genomes, most often such shared fragile regions are found in
evolutionarily close genomes. This observation led us to a conclusion
that fragility of any particular genomic position may appear only for a
limited amount of time. The newly proposed Turnover Fragile Breakage
Model postulates that fragile regions are subject to a ‘birth and
death’ process and thus have limited lifespan,” explained Alekseyev.
The Turnover Fragile Breakage Model suggests that genome rearrangements
are more likely to occur at the sites where rearrangements have
recently occurred – and that these rearrangement sites change over tens
of millions of years. Thus, the best clue to the current locations of
fragile regions in the human genome is offered by rearrangements that
happened in our closest ancestors – chimpanzee and other primates.
Pevzner is eagerly awaiting sequenced primate genomes from the Genome
10K Project. Sequencing the genomes of 10,000 vertebrate species —
including hundreds of primates — is bound to provide new insights on human
evolutionary history and possibly even the future rearrangements in the
human genome.
“The most likely future rearrangements in human genome will happen at the sites that were recently disrupted in primates,” said Pevzner.
Work tied to the new Turnover Fragile Breakage Model may also be useful for understanding genome rearrangements at the level of individuals, rather than entire species. In the future, the computer scientists hope to use similar tools to look at the chromosomal rearrangements that occur within the cells of individual cancer patients in order to develop new cancer diagnostics and drugs.
Pavel Pevzner is the Ronald R. Taylor Professor of Computer Science at UC San Diego; director of the NIH Center for Computational Mass Spectrometry; and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) Professor.
“Comparative Genomics Reveals Birth and Death of Fragile Regions in Mammalian Evolution,” in Genome Biology, Volume 11 Issue 11,by Max A. Alekseyev from the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA; and Pavel A. Pevzner from the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of California, San Diego, CA, USA.


