Quantitative assessment reveals the dominance of duplicated sequences in germline-derived extrachromosomal circular DNA

  • Lila Mouakkad-Montoya
  • , Michael M. Murata
  • , Arvis Sulovari
  • , Ryusuke Suzuki
  • , Beth Osia
  • , Anna Malkova
  • , Makoto Katsumata
  • , Armando E. Giuliano
  • , Evan E. Eichler
  • , Hisashi Tanaka

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Extrachromosomal circular DNA (eccDNA) originates from linear chromosomal DNA in various human tissues under physiological and disease conditions. The genomic origins of eccDNA have largely been investigated using in vitro-amplified DNA. However, in vitro amplification obscures quantitative information by skewing the total population stoichiometry. In addition, the analyses have focused on eccDNA stemming from single-copy genomic regions, leaving eccDNA from multicopy regions unexamined. To address these issues, we isolated eccDNA without in vitro amplification (naïve small circular DNA, nscDNA) and assessed the populations quantitatively by integrated genomic, molecular, and cytogenetic approaches. nscDNA of up to tens of kilobases were successfully enriched by our approach and were predominantly derived from multicopy genomic regions including segmental duplications (SDs). SDs, which account for 5% of the human genome and are hotspots for copy number variations, were significantly overrepresented in sperm nscDNA, with three times more sequencing reads derived from SDs than from the entire singlecopy regions. SDs were also overrepresented in mouse sperm nscDNA, which we estimated to comprise 0.2% of nuclear DNA. Considering that eccDNA can be integrated into chromosomes, germline-derived nscDNA may be a mediator of genome diversity.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere2102842118
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume118
Issue number47
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 23 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Extrachromosomal circular DNA
  • Multi-mapped reads
  • Segmental duplications
  • Sperm

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

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