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From telomere to telomere: The transcriptional and epigenetic state of human repeat elements.

Authors :
Hoyt, Savannah J
Hoyt, Savannah J
Storer, Jessica M
Hartley, Gabrielle A
Grady, Patrick GS
Gershman, Ariel
de Lima, Leonardo G
Limouse, Charles
Halabian, Reza
Wojenski, Luke
Rodriguez, Matias
Altemose, Nicolas
Rhie, Arang
Core, Leighton J
Gerton, Jennifer L
Makalowski, Wojciech
Olson, Daniel
Rosen, Jeb
Smit, Arian FA
Straight, Aaron F
Vollger, Mitchell R
Wheeler, Travis J
Schatz, Michael C
Eichler, Evan E
Phillippy, Adam M
Timp, Winston
Miga, Karen H
O'Neill, Rachel J
Hoyt, Savannah J
Hoyt, Savannah J
Storer, Jessica M
Hartley, Gabrielle A
Grady, Patrick GS
Gershman, Ariel
de Lima, Leonardo G
Limouse, Charles
Halabian, Reza
Wojenski, Luke
Rodriguez, Matias
Altemose, Nicolas
Rhie, Arang
Core, Leighton J
Gerton, Jennifer L
Makalowski, Wojciech
Olson, Daniel
Rosen, Jeb
Smit, Arian FA
Straight, Aaron F
Vollger, Mitchell R
Wheeler, Travis J
Schatz, Michael C
Eichler, Evan E
Phillippy, Adam M
Timp, Winston
Miga, Karen H
O'Neill, Rachel J
Source :
Science (New York, N.Y.); vol 376, iss 6588, eabk3112; 0036-8075
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Mobile elements and repetitive genomic regions are sources of lineage-specific genomic innovation and uniquely fingerprint individual genomes. Comprehensive analyses of such repeat elements, including those found in more complex regions of the genome, require a complete, linear genome assembly. We present a de novo repeat discovery and annotation of the T2T-CHM13 human reference genome. We identified previously unknown satellite arrays, expanded the catalog of variants and families for repeats and mobile elements, characterized classes of complex composite repeats, and located retroelement transduction events. We detected nascent transcription and delineated CpG methylation profiles to define the structure of transcriptionally active retroelements in humans, including those in centromeres. These data expand our insight into the diversity, distribution, and evolution of repetitive regions that have shaped the human genome.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Science (New York, N.Y.); vol 376, iss 6588, eabk3112; 0036-8075
Notes :
application/pdf, Science (New York, N.Y.) vol 376, iss 6588, eabk3112 0036-8075
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367452372
Document Type :
Electronic Resource