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KMID : 0578320100300010077
Molecules and Cells
2010 Volume.30 No. 1 p.77 ~ p.87
Functional Impact of Transposable Elements Using Bioinformatic Analysis and a Comparative Genomic Approach
Kim Dae-Soo

Huh Jae-Won
Kim Young-Hyun
Park Sang-Je
Chang Kyu-Tae
Abstract
A dual coding event, which is the translation of different isoforms from a single gene, is one of the special patterns among the alternative splicing events. This is an important mechanism for the regulation of protein diversity in human and mouse genomes. Although the regulation for dual coding events has been characterized in a few genes, the individual mechanism remains unclear. Numerous studies have described the exonization of transposable elements, which is the splicing mediated insertion of transposable element sequence fragments into mature mRNAs. Therefore, in this study, we investigated the number of transposable element (TE)-derived dual coding genes in human, chimpanzee and mouse genomes. TE fusion exons ap-peared in the dual coding regions of 309 human genes. Functional protein domain alterations by TE-derived dual coding events were observed in 129 human genes. Com-parative TE-derived dual coding events were also analyzed in chimpanzee and mouse orthologs. Seventy chimpanzee orthologs had TE-derived dual coding events, but mouse orthologs did not have any TE-derived dual coding events. Taken together, our analyses listed the number of TE-derived dual coding genes which could be investigated by experimental analysis and suggested that TE-derived dual coding events were major sources for the functional diversity of human genes, but not mouse genes.
KEYWORD
bioinformatic analysis, dual coding gene, TE-derived dual coding genes, transposable element
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