Previous studies have found that DNA-flanking low-complexity regions (LCRs) have an increased substitution rate. Here, the substitution rate was confirmed to increase in the vicinity of LCRs in several primate species, including humans. This effect was also found among human sequences from the 1000 Genomes Project. A strong correlation was found between average substitution rate per site and distance from the LCR, as well as the proportion of genes with gaps in the alignment at each site and distance from the LCR. Along with substitution rates, dN/dS ratios were also determined for each site, and the proportion of sites undergoing negative selection was found to have a negative relationship with distance from the LCR
Background: Ancestral reconstructions of mammalian genomes have revealed that evolutionary breakpoin...
Comparison of human and mouse genomes has revealed that many non-coding regions have levels of seque...
<div><p>Microsatellites are a major component of the human genome, and their evolution has been much...
Previous studies have found that DNA-flanking low-complexity regions (LCRs) have an increased substi...
Copyright: 2008 Elango et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Cr...
Mutations have been examined in the 1500 interspersed Alu repeats of human DNA that have been sequen...
Understanding the origins of localized substitution rate heterogeneity has important implications fo...
Background: The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is a key model of genetic polymorphism. Selec...
Point mutation rates in exons (synonymous sites) and noncoding (introns and intergenic) regions are ...
Comparative genomics allow us to search the human genome for segments that were extensively changed ...
Unraveling the evolutionary forces responsible for variations of neutral substitution patterns among...
Mutation rate varies greatly between nucleotide sites of the human genome and depends both on the gl...
Background: Comparison of the human genome with other primates offers the opportunity to detect evo...
Evolution of sequencesmostly involves independent changes at different sites. However, substitutions...
Background: Insertions and deletions of DNA segments (indels) are together with substitutions the ma...
Background: Ancestral reconstructions of mammalian genomes have revealed that evolutionary breakpoin...
Comparison of human and mouse genomes has revealed that many non-coding regions have levels of seque...
<div><p>Microsatellites are a major component of the human genome, and their evolution has been much...
Previous studies have found that DNA-flanking low-complexity regions (LCRs) have an increased substi...
Copyright: 2008 Elango et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Cr...
Mutations have been examined in the 1500 interspersed Alu repeats of human DNA that have been sequen...
Understanding the origins of localized substitution rate heterogeneity has important implications fo...
Background: The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is a key model of genetic polymorphism. Selec...
Point mutation rates in exons (synonymous sites) and noncoding (introns and intergenic) regions are ...
Comparative genomics allow us to search the human genome for segments that were extensively changed ...
Unraveling the evolutionary forces responsible for variations of neutral substitution patterns among...
Mutation rate varies greatly between nucleotide sites of the human genome and depends both on the gl...
Background: Comparison of the human genome with other primates offers the opportunity to detect evo...
Evolution of sequencesmostly involves independent changes at different sites. However, substitutions...
Background: Insertions and deletions of DNA segments (indels) are together with substitutions the ma...
Background: Ancestral reconstructions of mammalian genomes have revealed that evolutionary breakpoin...
Comparison of human and mouse genomes has revealed that many non-coding regions have levels of seque...
<div><p>Microsatellites are a major component of the human genome, and their evolution has been much...