Large Tandem, Higher Order Repeats and Regularly Dispersed Repeat Units Contribute Substantially to Divergence Between Human and Chimpanzee Y Chromosomes
Vladimir Paar, Matko Glun\v{c}i\'c, Ivan Basar, Marija Rosandi\'c,, Petar Paar, Mislav Cvitkovi\'c

TL;DR
This study compares the Y chromosome structures of humans and chimpanzees, revealing extensive differences in tandem repeats and higher order repeats that significantly contribute to the overall genetic divergence between the two species.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of Y chromosome repeats, identifying new large repeat units and human-accelerated regions, highlighting rapid evolution post human-chimpanzee split.
Findings
Discovery of human-accelerated HOR regions
Identification of numerous large repeat units, many reported for the first time
Estimated 14% divergence between human and chimpanzee Y chromosomes
Abstract
Comparison of human and chimpanzee genomes has received much attention, because of paramount role for understanding evolutionary step distinguishing us from our closest living relative. In order to contribute to insight into Y chromosome evolutionary history, we study and compare tandems, higher order repeats (HORs), and regularly dispersed repeats in human and chimpanzee Y chromosome contigs, using robust Global Repeat Map algorithm. We find a new type of long-range acceleration, human-accelerated HOR regions. In peripheral domains of 35mer human alphoid HORs, we find riddled features with ten additional repeat monomers. In chimpanzee, we identify 30mer alphoid HOR. We construct alphoid HOR schemes showing significant human-chimpanzee difference, revealing rapid evolution after human-chimpanzee separation. We identify and analyze over 20 large repeat units, most of them reported here…
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