Abstract
Since copy number variants (CNVs) have been recognized as an important source of genetic and transcriptomic variation, we aimed to characterize the impact of CNVs located within coding, intergenic, upstream, and downstream gene regions on the expression of transcripts. Regions in which deletions occurred most often were introns, while duplications in coding regions. The transcript expression was lower for deleted coding (P = 0.008) and intronic regions (P = 1.355 × 10−10), but it was not changed in the case of upstream and downstream gene regions (P = 0.085). Moreover, the expression was decreased if duplication occurred in the coding region (P = 8.318 × 10−5). Furthermore, a negative correlation (r = − 0.27) between transcript length and its expression was observed. The correlation between the percent of deleted/duplicated transcript and transcript expression level was not significant for all concerned genomic regions in five out of six animals. The exceptions were deletions in coding regions (P = 0.004) and duplications in introns (P = 0.01) in one individual. CNVs in coding (deletions, duplications) and intronic (deletions) regions are important modulators of transcripts by reducing their expression level. We hypothesize that deletions imply severe consequences by interrupting genes. The negative correlation between the size of the transcript and its expression level found in this study is consistent with the hypothesis that selection favours shorter introns and a moderate number of exons in highly expressed genes. This may explain the transcript expression reduction by duplications. We did not find the correlation between the size of deletions/duplications and transcript expression level suggesting that expression is modulated by CNVs regardless of their size.
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