Predicting Human Minisatellite Polymorphism

  1. France Denoeud1,4,
  2. Gilles Vergnaud1,2, and
  3. Gary Benson3
  1. 1Laboratoire GPMS, Institut de Génétique et Microbiologie, Université Paris-Sud, 91405 Orsay cedex, France, 2Centre d'Etudes du Bouchet, 91710 Vert le Petit, France, and 3Department of Biomathematical Sciences, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029, USA

Abstract

We seek to define sequence-based predictive criteria to identify polymorphic and hypermutable minisatellites in the human genome. Polymorphism of a representative pool of minisatellites, selected from human chromosomes 21 and 22, was experimentally measured by PCR typing in a population of unrelated individuals. Two predictive approaches were tested. One uses simple repeat characteristics (e.g., unit length, copy number, nucleotide bias) and a more complex measure, termed HistoryR, based on the presence of variant motifs in the tandem array. We find that HistoryR and percentage of GC are strongly correlated with polymorphism and, as predictive criteria, reduce by half the number of repeats to type while enriching the proportion with heterozygosity ≥0.5, from a background level of 43% to 59%. The second approach uses length differences between minisatellites in the two releases of the human genome sequence (from the public consortium and Celera). As a predictor, this similarly enriches the number of polymorphic minisatellites, but fails to identify an unexpectedly large number of these. Finally, typing of the highly polymorphic minisatellites in large families identified one new hypermutable minisatellite, located in a predicted coding sequence. This may represent the first coding human hypermutable minisatellite.

[Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org.]

Footnotes

  • 4 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL France.Denoeud{at}igmors.u-psud.fr; FAX 33-1-69-15-66-78.

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.574403. Article published online before print in April 2003.

    • Received July 1, 2002.
    • Accepted January 28, 2003.
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