Segmental duplications or low copy repeats (LCRs) constitute duplicated regions interspersed in the human genome, currently neglected in standard analyses due to their extreme complexity. Recent functional studies have indicated the potential of genes within LCRs in synaptogenesis, neuronal migration, and neocortical expansion in the human lineage. One of the regions with the highest proportion of duplicated sequence is the 22q11.2 locus, carrying eight LCRs (LCR22-A until LCR22-H), and rearrangements between them cause the 22q11.2 deletion syndrome. The LCR22-A block was recently reported to be hypervariable in the human population. It remains unknown whether this variability also exists in non-human primates, since research is strongly ha...
Copy number variants (CNVs) are increasingly acknowledged as an important source of evolutionary nov...
We have investigated the evolutionary history of the 4q35 paralogous region, and of a sub-family of ...
Segmental duplications contribute to human evolution, adaptation and genomic instability but are oft...
Low copy repeats (LCRs) are recognized as a significant source of genomic instability, driving genom...
In recent decades, comparative chromosomal banding, chromosome painting, and gene-order studies have...
In recent decades, comparative chromosomal banding, chromosome painting, and gene-order studies have...
AbstractSegmental duplications (SDs) play a key role in genome evolution by providing material for g...
The most prevalent microdeletion in the human population occurs at 22q11.2, a region rich in chromos...
The structural diversity of the human genome is much higher than previously assumed although its ful...
AbstractArray comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) has been widely used to detect copy number va...
The underlying mechanism by which the interspersed pattern of human segmental duplications has evolv...
An unexpected finding of the human genome was the large fraction of the genome organized as blocks o...
Copy number differences (CNDs), and the concomitant differences in gene number, have contributed sig...
We analyzed genomes of nonhuman primates to determine the ancestral state of a 9.1-kb insertion/dele...
The rhesus macaque is an abundant species of Old World monkeys and a valuable model organism for bio...
Copy number variants (CNVs) are increasingly acknowledged as an important source of evolutionary nov...
We have investigated the evolutionary history of the 4q35 paralogous region, and of a sub-family of ...
Segmental duplications contribute to human evolution, adaptation and genomic instability but are oft...
Low copy repeats (LCRs) are recognized as a significant source of genomic instability, driving genom...
In recent decades, comparative chromosomal banding, chromosome painting, and gene-order studies have...
In recent decades, comparative chromosomal banding, chromosome painting, and gene-order studies have...
AbstractSegmental duplications (SDs) play a key role in genome evolution by providing material for g...
The most prevalent microdeletion in the human population occurs at 22q11.2, a region rich in chromos...
The structural diversity of the human genome is much higher than previously assumed although its ful...
AbstractArray comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) has been widely used to detect copy number va...
The underlying mechanism by which the interspersed pattern of human segmental duplications has evolv...
An unexpected finding of the human genome was the large fraction of the genome organized as blocks o...
Copy number differences (CNDs), and the concomitant differences in gene number, have contributed sig...
We analyzed genomes of nonhuman primates to determine the ancestral state of a 9.1-kb insertion/dele...
The rhesus macaque is an abundant species of Old World monkeys and a valuable model organism for bio...
Copy number variants (CNVs) are increasingly acknowledged as an important source of evolutionary nov...
We have investigated the evolutionary history of the 4q35 paralogous region, and of a sub-family of ...
Segmental duplications contribute to human evolution, adaptation and genomic instability but are oft...