Association between genomic instability and evolutionary chromosomal rearrangements in neotropical primates

During the last decades, the mammalian genome has been proposed to have regions prone to breakage and reorganization concentrated in certain chromosomal bands that seem to correspond to evolutionary breakpoints. These bands are likely to be involved in chromosome fragility or instability. In Primate...

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Publicado: 2018
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_17596653_v10_n7_p1647_Puntieri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_17596653_v10_n7_p1647_Puntieri
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Sumario:During the last decades, the mammalian genome has been proposed to have regions prone to breakage and reorganization concentrated in certain chromosomal bands that seem to correspond to evolutionary breakpoints. These bands are likely to be involved in chromosome fragility or instability. In Primates, some biomarkers of genetic damage may be associated with various degrees of genomic instability. Here, we investigated the usefulness of Sister Chromatid Exchange as abiomarker of potential sites of frequent chromosome breakage and rearrangement in Alouatta caraya, Ateles chamek, Ateles paniscus, and Cebus cay. These Neotropical species have particular genomic and chromosomal features allowing the analysis of genomic instability for comparative purposes. We determined the frequency of spontaneous induction of Sister Chromatid Exchanges and assessed the relationship between these and structural rearrangements implicated in the evolution of the primates of interest. Overall, A. caraya and C. cay presenteda lowproportionof statistically significant unstablebands, suggesting fairly stablegenomes andtheexistenceof somekind of protection against endogenous damage. In contrast, Ateles showed a highly significant proportion of unstable bands; thesewere mainly found in the rearranged regions, which is consistent with the numerous genomic reorganizations thatmight have occurred during the evolution of this genus. © The Author(s) 2018.