Comparative analysis of tandem repeats from hundreds of species reveals unique insights into centromere evolution
University of California, Davis · Agricultural Research Service · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Centromeres are essential for chromosome segregation, yet their DNA sequences evolve rapidly. In most animals and plants that have been studied, centromeres contain megabase-scale arrays of tandem repeats. Despite their importance, very little is known about the degree to which centromere tandem repeats share common properties between different species across different phyla. We used bioinformatic methods to identify high-copy tandem repeats from 282 species using publicly available genomic sequence and our own data.
Our methods are compatible with all current sequencing technologies. Long Pacific Biosciences sequence reads allowed us to find tandem repeat monomers up to 1,419 bp. We assumed that the most abundant tandem repeat is the centromere DNA, which was true for most species whose centromeres have been previously characterized, suggesting this is a general property of genomes. High-copy centromere tandem repeats were found in almost all animal and plant genomes, but repeat monomers were highly variable in sequence composition and length. Furthermore, phylogenetic analysis of sequence homology showed little evidence of sequence conservation beyond approximately 50 million years of divergence. We find that despite an overall lack of sequence conservation, centromere tandem repeats from diverse species showed similar modes of evolution.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.26
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 136
Authors
17Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Centromere
- Tandem repeat
- Evolutionary biology
- Human genetics
- Genetics
- Computational biology
- Genome Biology
Funding
- NSNational Science FoundationAwards: 0922703, 1026094, IOS-0922703
- HHHoward Hughes Medical Institute
- UDU.S. Department of EnergyAward: DE-AI02-09ER64829
- UDU.S. Department of AgricultureAward: T32-GM008799
- GAGordon and Betty Moore Foundation
- NINational Institutes of HealthAward: T32-GM008799
- OOOffice of ScienceAward: DE-AI02-09ER64829
- ARAgricultural Research Service
- NINational Institute of General Medical SciencesAwards: T32-GM008799, GM008799