MBE Advance Access published online on June 29, 2006
Molecular Biology and Evolution, doi:10.1093/molbev/msl048
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1 Département de biologie et Centre de recherche avancée en génomique environnementale Université d'Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1N 6N5
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Two different hypotheses have been proposed to explain the observation that some genomes contain more processed pseudogenes than others. One predicts that processed pseudogenes abundance is inversely proportional to the substrate specificity of the reverse transcriptases that generates processed pseudogenes. The other predicts that the amount of processed pseudogenes found in genomes is proportional to the length of oogenesis. Here, we test the oogenesis hypothesis by analyzing the data from six studies that described the number of pseudogenes on different chromosomes of the human and/or mouse genomes. Our results show a significant over abundance of processed pseudogenes in the X chromosomes and a significant underrepresentation of processed pseudogenes in the Y chromosome of the human genome. These observations support the hypothesis that the number of processed pseudogenes is proportional to the length of oogenesis.
Accepted June 23, 2006
Letter
Processed Pseudogenes Are More Abundant in Human and Mouse X Chromosomes than in Autosomes
Guy Drouin 1 *
Guy Drouin, E-mail: gdrouin{at}science.uottawa.ca
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