Population differences of chromosome 22q11.2 duplication structure predispose differentially to microdeletion and inversion
Porubsky, David et al.
Chromosome 22q11.2 microdeletion syndrome (22q11.2DS) is mediated by high-identity polymorphic low-copy repeats (LCRA-to-D) that have been challenging to sequence characterize. We sequence-resolved 135 chromosome 22q11.2 haplotypes from diverse humans and define 63 distinct structural configurations differing in size by 11-fold for LCRA. This diversity is driven by a 105 kbp segmental duplication flanked by 25 kbp inverted repeats that arose in the apes but expanded in humans ~1 million years ago. African LCRA haplotypes are significantly longer (p = 0.0047) and predicted to be more protective against 22q11.2DS (p = 1.14×10-6) due to enrichment of inverted 105 kbp repeats. We identify nine distinct (including five recurrent) inversions spanning LCRA-D. Sequencing four families indicates LCRA-D deletions map to 105 kbp repeats, whereas inversions map to the 25 kbp repeats. Here, we show specific haplotype LCR architectures and recurrent large-scale inversions modulate susceptibility to 22q11.2DS and help explain its reduced prevalence among individuals of African ancestry.