PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Allele frequencies of variants in ultra conserved elements identify selective pressure on transcription factor binding.

  • Toomas Silla,
  • Katrin Kepp,
  • E Shyong Tai,
  • Liang Goh,
  • Sonia Davila,
  • Tina Catela Ivkovic,
  • George A Calin,
  • P Mathijs Voorhoeve

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110692
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. e110692

Abstract

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Ultra-conserved genes or elements (UCGs/UCEs) in the human genome are extreme examples of conservation. We characterized natural variations in 2884 UCEs and UCGs in two distinct populations; Singaporean Chinese (n = 280) and Italian (n = 501) by using a pooled sample, targeted capture, sequencing approach. We identify, with high confidence, in these regions the abundance of rare SNVs (MAF5%) are more often found in relatively less-conserved nucleotides within UCEs, compared to rare variants. Moreover, prevalent variants are less likely to overlap transcription factor binding site. Using SNPfold we found no significant influence of RNA secondary structure on UCE conservation. All together, these results suggest UCEs are not under selective pressure as a stretch of DNA but are under differential evolutionary pressure on the single nucleotide level.