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Analysis of Crossover Breakpoints Yields New Insights into the Nature of the Gene Conversion Events Associated with Large NF1 Deletions Mediated by Nonallelic Homologous Recombination
Authors:Kathrin Bengesser  Julia Vogt  Tanja Mussotter  Victor‐Felix Mautner  Ludwine Messiaen  David N Cooper  Hildegard Kehrer‐Sawatzki
Institution:1. Institute of Human Genetics, University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany;2. Department of Neurology, University Hospital Hamburg Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany;3. Medical Genomics Laboratory, Department of Genetics, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama;4. Institute of Medical Genetics, School of Medicine, Cardiff University, UK
Abstract:Large NF1 deletions are mediated by nonallelic homologous recombination (NAHR). An in‐depth analysis of gene conversion operating in the breakpoint‐flanking regions of large NF1 deletions was performed to investigate whether the rate of discontinuous gene conversion during NAHR with crossover is increased, as has been previously noted in NAHR‐mediated rearrangements. All 20 germline type‐1 NF1 deletions analyzed were mediated by NAHR associated with continuous gene conversion within the breakpoint‐flanking regions. Continuous gene conversion was also observed in 31/32 type‐2 NF1 deletions investigated. In contrast to the meiotic type‐1 NF1 deletions, type‐2 NF1 deletions are predominantly of post‐zygotic origin. Our findings therefore imply that the mitotic as well as the meiotic NAHR intermediates of large NF1 deletions are processed by long‐patch mismatch repair (MMR), thereby ensuring gene conversion tract continuity instead of the discontinuous gene conversion that is characteristic of short‐patch repair. However, the single type‐2 NF1 deletion not exhibiting continuous gene conversion was processed without MMR, yielding two different deletion‐bearing chromosomes, which were distinguishable in terms of their breakpoint positions. Our findings indicate that MMR failure during NAHR, followed by post‐meiotic/mitotic segregation, has the potential to give rise to somatic mosaicism in human genomic rearrangements by generating breakpoint heterogeneity.
Keywords:NF1  neurofibromatosis type 1  microdeletion  gene conversion  genomic disorder
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