Distribution and intensity of constraint in mammalian genomic sequence
Stanford University · National Institutes of Health · +1 more institution
Abstract
Comparisons of orthologous genomic DNA sequences can be used to characterize regions that have been subject to purifying selection and are enriched for functional elements. We here present the results of such an analysis on an alignment of sequences from 29 mammalian species. The alignment captures approximately 3.9 neutral substitutions per site and spans approximately 1.9 Mbp of the human genome. We identify constrained elements from 3 bp to over 1 kbp in length, covering approximately 5.5% of the human locus. Our estimate for the total amount of nonexonic constraint experienced by this locus is roughly twice that for exonic constraint. Constrained elements tend to cluster, and we identify large constrained…
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Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Negative selection
- Genome
- Genetics
- Computational biology
- Locus (genetics)
- Human genome
- Constraint (computer-aided design)
- Life in Land