Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine geneticists have
been involved in a detailed analysis of the reference sequence of chromosome
7 that is published in the July 10 issue of the journal Nature.
Evan Eichler, Ph.D., assistant professor of genetics, and Jeffrey
Bailey, research associate in the department of genetics, performed
the analysis concerning repeat structure and the organization of duplication
content on chromosome 7. The duplicated sequences are among the study's
most interesting findings. Compared with previously analyzed human
chromosomes, chromosome 7 contains an unusually high amount of duplicated
sequence segments, covering roughly 8 percent of its DNA sequence.
Researchers do not yet know the mechanism behind this high rate of
duplication and also do not know why the duplication is much more extensive
on the short arm of chromosome 7 than on its long arm.
However, in their study, researchers noted that this segmental duplication
may encourage the type of genetic deletions that cause disease, as
appears to be the case with the chromosomal region implicated in Williams-Beuren
syndrome. The syndrome, which is characterized by growth deficiency,
heart disorders and mild mental retardation, is associated with very
large deletions in a region of the long arm of chromosome 7 a region
that the new analysis also found to be a hotbed of duplicated segments.
Based on previous, smaller-scale studies, genetic scientists know that
such duplicated segments, or duplicons, serve to encourage large-scale
deletions and other dramatic rearrangements of genetic material. It
is also known that, in addition to their potential to cause disease
by disrupting genes, such genetic rearrangements may on rare occasions
be beneficial by facilitating the formation of new genes.
A multi-institution team, led by the Washington University School
of Medicine in St. Louis, report in the study that it has sequenced
99.4 percent of the gene-containing region of chromosome 7 to an accuracy
of greater than 99.99 percent. The team also describes its analysis
of this highly accurate reference sequence, an effort that took advantage
of recently released data on the mouse genome to refine gene predictions
and zero in on chromosomal regions that may be of special interest
in understanding genetic diseases.
In addition to representing the largest chromosome to date to undergo
detailed sequence analysis, chromosome 7 is significant because it
has served as a pioneering chromosome for genomic and genetic studies.
Researchers first developed genome mapping techniques on chromosome
7, and in the late 1980s, this chromosome was also the first to be
searched by a then-novel technique called positional cloning in the
successful hunt for the cystic fibrosis gene.
"Chromosome 7 has long been of interest to the medical community.
Besides containing many genes that are crucial to development, this
chromosome also holds the gene for cystic fibrosis and is frequently
damaged in some types of leukemia and other cancers," said Francis
S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., director of the National Human Genome Research
Institute (NHGRI), which funded, and also participated in, the study. "This
new analysis, coupled with our commitment to free and unrestricted
access to sequence data, should further speed the discovery of genes
on chromosome 7 related to human health and disease."
Richard K. Wilson, Ph.D., director of the Washington University School
of Medicine's Genome Sequencing Center and lead author of the study,
said, "Our findings underscore the dynamic nature of the human
genome and reveal how sequence structure may provide us with new insights
into the genetic basis of human disease. But this analysis also drives
home the fact that we still have a long way to go that we are just
taking our first steps down the pathway to understanding the complicated
interplay of genomics and health. Each chromosome that we analyze will
likely add a new twist or turn."
In their analysis of the highly polished reference sequence, Wilson
and his colleagues identified approximately 1,150 protein-coding genes
on chromosome 7, about 20 percent less than the 1,455 predicted in
a previous study by a different team.
The accuracy and completeness of the human chromosome 7 sequence assembled
by the International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium was evaluated
in part by Eric D. Green, M.D., Ph.D., and his colleagues at NHGRI's
Genome Technology Branch. When they compared the representation of
markers called sequence-tagged sites (STSs) in the recently assembled
sequence with STSs in previously constructed physical and genetic maps
of chromosome 7, the NHGRI researchers found an excellent overall concordance.
Green, who is NHGRI's scientific director and a co-author of the study,
also emphasized the value of comparing the sequence of human chromosome
7 to its recently sequenced counterpart in the mouse.
"Comparing the human sequence to the mouse sequence allowed our
team to perform much more rigorous analyses of genes than would have
otherwise been possible," Green said. "The ability to place
the human sequence alongside the mouse sequence helped us to swiftly
distinguish real, protein-coding genes from pseudo-genes. The power
of comparative genomics really sharpened our focus."
In addition to the CWRU School of Medicine, NHGRI and Washington University,
other institutions taking part in the chromosome 7 analysis were: University
of Washington Genome Center, Seattle; University of California, Santa
Cruz; and EMBL, Heidelberg, Germany.
There are 23 pairs of chromosomes in the human genome, which bear
the 3 billion DNA letters that carry the genetic blueprint for human
life. Chromosome 7 is one of the larger chromosomes, containing about
5 percent of the DNA in the human genome.
The Human Genome Project officially began in October 1990 and was
completed in April 2003. The entire project, including genetic mapping,
technology development, the study of model organisms, and the ethical,
legal and social implications (ELSI) program, was completed more than
two years ahead of schedule at a cost that was $400 million less than
expected.
The initial analysis of the draft human genome sequence was published
in Nature in February 2001. With the completion of the Human Genome
Project, researchers plan to publish a separate analysis on each completed
chromosome over the next year or so. In addition to chromosome 7, researchers
with the International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium have already
published analyses of chromosomes 14, 20, 21, 22 and Y.
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