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Global identification of mammalian host and nested gene pairs reveal tissue-specific transcriptional interplay
by
Cain, James
, Martinez-Nunez, Rocio T
, Oakey, Rebecca J.
, Montibus, Bertille
in
Genomics
2024
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Global identification of mammalian host and nested gene pairs reveal tissue-specific transcriptional interplay
by
Cain, James
, Martinez-Nunez, Rocio T
, Oakey, Rebecca J.
, Montibus, Bertille
in
Genomics
2024
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Global identification of mammalian host and nested gene pairs reveal tissue-specific transcriptional interplay
Paper
Global identification of mammalian host and nested gene pairs reveal tissue-specific transcriptional interplay
2024
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Overview
Nucleotide sequences along a gene provide instructions to transcriptional and co-transcriptional machinery allowing genome expansion into the transcriptome. Interestingly, nucleotide sequence can often be shared between two genes and in some occurrences, a gene is located completely within a different gene, these are known as host/nested genes pairs. In these instances, if both genes are transcribed, overlap can result in a transcriptional crosstalk where genes regulate each other. Despite this, a comprehensive annotation of where such genes are located, and their expression patterns is lacking. To address this, we provide an up-to-date catalogue of host/nested gene pairs in mouse and human, showing that over a tenth of all genes contain a nested gene. We discovered that transcriptional co-occurrence is often tissue-specific. This co-expression was especially prevalent within the transcriptionally permissive tissue, testis. We used this developmental system and scRNA-seq analysis to demonstrate that co-expression of pairs can occur in single cells and transcription in the same place at the same time can enhance transcript diversity of the host gene. In agreement, host genes are more transcript diverse than the rest of the transcriptome and we propose that nested gene expression drives this observed diversity. Given that host/nested gene configurations were common in both human and mouse genomes, the interplay between pairs is therefore likely selected for, highlighting the relevance of transcriptional crosstalk between genes which share nucleic acid sequence. The results and analysis are available on an Rshiny application.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
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