znf230 gene
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2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantin Gunbin ◽  
Konstantin Popadin ◽  
Leonid Peshkin ◽  
Sofia Annis ◽  
Zoe Fleischmann ◽  
...  

Introduction: Increasingly, the emergence and evolution of our species is being tied to genetic exchange between divergent lineages within ~1Ma (e.g., Neanderthals, Denisovans). However, little is known about genetic exchange during earlier (pre-1Ma) human evolution and between more divergent lineages. Results: We present evidence of hybridization within human lineage, show that it likely happened between highly divergent (~4.5My) lineages, more than once. We use analysis of nuclear pseudogenes of mtDNA (“NUMTs”). NUMTs are considered “mtDNA fossils”, as they preserve sequences of ancient mtDNA because mutational rate in the nucleus is much lower than in mtDNA. We demonstrate that a NUMT on human chromosome 5, which is shared by chimpanzee and gorilla, had descended from a mitochondrial genome that had been divergent from our ancestor’s mtDNA by ~4.5% at the time of pseudogene insertion. This implies that this pseudogene should have been inserted in a hominid that at that time had been diverged by about 4.5My of evolution from the hominid that at that time carried our mtDNA lineage. In order for this pseudogene and our mtDNA to end up in the same body, these two hominids should have mated with each other. The large divergence implies a distant interspecies (or even inter-generic) hybridization. Additionally, analysis of two other NUMTs (on Chr11 and Chr7) suggests that hybridization events occurred repeatedly. To exclude the large ancestral population size effect we show that mtDNA divergence in extant ape populations does not depend on population size. Discussion: It is thought that within mammals, it takes ~2-4My to establish reproductive isolation. However, fertile inter-generic hybrids have been documented among several primates, separated by ca. 4My. Very recently, hybridization between Colobine genera separated by ~5 My was reported to involve a NUMT scenario similar to what we had proposed human ancestors. Interestingly, phylogenic analysis consistently places the chr5 NUMT insertion around the time of the Homo/Pan split. Intriguingly, certain hominin fossils of that epoch have been interpreted alternately as more human-like or more ape-like. Such morphological mosaicisity could potentially be explained by hybridization. Fixation of NUMTs in question within population should have been rather efficient, since these pseudogenes appear to have been fixed in more than one population. Thus their spread across populations might have been driven by selection. Indeed, NUMTs on chr5 and chr11 are located in 3’ regions of functional genes. Most intriguingly, Ps11 is located 3’ to the RNF141/ZNF230 gene, essential for spermatogenesis. NUMT might have served as an expression modifier for RNF141, resulting in reproductive advantage. Indeed, RNF141 demonstrates selectively driven expression shift in testis of the ancestor of hominines.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantin Gunbin ◽  
Konstantin Popadin ◽  
Leonid Peshkin ◽  
Sofia Annis ◽  
Zoe Fleischmann ◽  
...  

Introduction: Increasingly, the emergence and evolution of our species is being tied to genetic exchange between divergent lineages within ~1Ma (e.g., Neanderthals, Denisovans). However, little is known about genetic exchange during earlier (pre-1Ma) human evolution and between more divergent lineages. Results: We present evidence of hybridization within human lineage, show that it likely happened between highly divergent (~4.5My) lineages, more than once. We use analysis of nuclear pseudogenes of mtDNA (“NUMTs”). NUMTs are considered “mtDNA fossils”, as they preserve sequences of ancient mtDNA because mutational rate in the nucleus is much lower than in mtDNA. We demonstrate that a NUMT on human chromosome 5, which is shared by chimpanzee and gorilla, had descended from a mitochondrial genome that had been divergent from our ancestor’s mtDNA by ~4.5% at the time of pseudogene insertion. This implies that this pseudogene should have been inserted in a hominid that at that time had been diverged by about 4.5My of evolution from the hominid that at that time carried our mtDNA lineage. In order for this pseudogene and our mtDNA to end up in the same body, these two hominids should have mated with each other. The large divergence implies a distant interspecies (or even inter-generic) hybridization. Additionally, analysis of two other NUMTs (on Chr11 and Chr7) suggests that hybridization events occurred repeatedly. To exclude the large ancestral population size effect we show that mtDNA divergence in extant ape populations does not depend on population size. Discussion: It is thought that within mammals, it takes ~2-4My to establish reproductive isolation. However, fertile inter-generic hybrids have been documented among several primates, separated by ca. 4My. Very recently, hybridization between Colobine genera separated by ~5 My was reported to involve a NUMT scenario similar to what we had proposed human ancestors. Interestingly, phylogenic analysis consistently places the chr5 NUMT insertion around the time of the Homo/Pan split. Intriguingly, certain hominin fossils of that epoch have been interpreted alternately as more human-like or more ape-like. Such morphological mosaicisity could potentially be explained by hybridization. Fixation of NUMTs in question within population should have been rather efficient, since these pseudogenes appear to have been fixed in more than one population. Thus their spread across populations might have been driven by selection. Indeed, NUMTs on chr5 and chr11 are located in 3’ regions of functional genes. Most intriguingly, Ps11 is located 3’ to the RNF141/ZNF230 gene, essential for spermatogenesis. NUMT might have served as an expression modifier for RNF141, resulting in reproductive advantage. Indeed, RNF141 demonstrates selectively driven expression shift in testis of the ancestor of hominines.


2001 ◽  
Vol 359 (3) ◽  
pp. 721 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sizhong ZHANG ◽  
Weimin QIU ◽  
Hui WU ◽  
Ge ZHANG ◽  
Mingkong HUANG ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Vol 359 (3) ◽  
pp. 721-727 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sizhong ZHANG ◽  
Weimin QIU ◽  
Hui WU ◽  
Ge ZHANG ◽  
Mingkong HUANG ◽  
...  

The zinc finger gene family represents one of the largest in the mammalian genome, with several of these genes reported to be involved in spermatogenesis. A newly discovered gene has been identified that is expressed abundantly in the testicular tissue of fertile men as determined by mRNA differential display. The gene encodes a C3HC4-type zinc finger protein motif (ring finger motif) consistent with a role in pre-meiotic or post-meiotic sperm development. The gene was named ZNF230 and mapped to the short arm of chromosome 11 (11p15). ZNF230 has two transcripts, of 1kb and 4.4kb in length. The shorter 1kb transcript was only detected in testicular tissue whereas the longer 4.4kb transcript was not detected in testis but was found in several other tissues. The lack of detectable ZNF230 expression in azoospermic patients by reverse transcriptase-mediated PCR analysis is interpreted to mean that this gene is involved in maintaining normal human male fertility.


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