Human-lineage-specific genomic elements are associated with neurodegenerative disease and APOE transcript usage.

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2021-04-06

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Chen, Zhongbo
Zhang, David
Reynolds, Regina H
Gustavsson, Emil K
García-Ruiz, Sonia
D'Sa, Karishma
Fairbrother-Browne, Aine
Vandrovcova, Jana
International Parkinson’s Disease Genomics Consortium (IPDGC)
Hardy, John

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Abstract

Knowledge of genomic features specific to the human lineage may provide insights into brain-related diseases. We leverage high-depth whole genome sequencing data to generate a combined annotation identifying regions simultaneously depleted for genetic variation (constrained regions) and poorly conserved across primates. We propose that these constrained, non-conserved regions (CNCRs) have been subject to human-specific purifying selection and are enriched for brain-specific elements. We find that CNCRs are depleted from protein-coding genes but enriched within lncRNAs. We demonstrate that per-SNP heritability of a range of brain-relevant phenotypes are enriched within CNCRs. We find that genes implicated in neurological diseases have high CNCR density, including APOE, highlighting an unannotated intron-3 retention event. Using human brain RNA-sequencing data, we show the intron-3-retaining transcript to be more abundant in Alzheimer's disease with more severe tau and amyloid pathological burden. Thus, we demonstrate potential association of human-lineage-specific sequences in brain development and neurological disease.

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Alzheimer Disease
Apolipoproteins E
Brain
Chromosomes, Human, Pair 19
Conserved Sequence
DNA, Intergenic
Gene Ontology
Genome, Human
Humans
Introns
Linkage Disequilibrium
Molecular Sequence Annotation
Neurodegenerative Diseases
Phenotype
Phylogeny
Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
RNA, Long Noncoding
RNA, Messenger
Regression Analysis

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