Replicative mechanisms for CNV formation are error prone

James Lupski and colleagues report a high-resolution analysis of 67 breakpoint junctions in 31 unrelated individuals with MECP2 duplication syndrome. They find that ~52% of genomic rearrangements in these individuals represent complex events in which the sequences flanking the breakpoints acquire ad...

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Published inNature genetics Vol. 45; no. 11; pp. 1319 - 1326
Main Authors Carvalho, Claudia M B, Pehlivan, Davut, Ramocki, Melissa B, Fang, Ping, Alleva, Benjamin, Franco, Luis M, Belmont, John W, Hastings, P J, Lupski, James R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Nature Publishing Group US 01.11.2013
Nature Publishing Group
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ISSN1061-4036
1546-1718
1546-1718
DOI10.1038/ng.2768

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Summary:James Lupski and colleagues report a high-resolution analysis of 67 breakpoint junctions in 31 unrelated individuals with MECP2 duplication syndrome. They find that ~52% of genomic rearrangements in these individuals represent complex events in which the sequences flanking the breakpoints acquire additional changes, including small insertions, deletions and point mutations, likely resulting from error-prone DNA polymerase activity. We investigated 67 breakpoint junctions of gene copy number gains in 31 unrelated subjects. We observed a strikingly high frequency of small deletions and insertions (29%) apparently originating from polymerase slippage events, in addition to frameshifts and point mutations in homonucleotide runs (13%), at or flanking the breakpoint junctions of complex copy number variants. These single-nucleotide variants were generated concomitantly with the de novo complex genomic rearrangement (CGR) event. Our findings implicate low-fidelity, error-prone DNA polymerase activity in synthesis associated with DNA repair mechanisms as the cause of local increase in point mutation burden associated with human CGR.
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ISSN:1061-4036
1546-1718
1546-1718
DOI:10.1038/ng.2768