Protocadherins (PCDH), localized to synaptic junctions, contribute to the formation of neuronal networks during brain development;
thus, it is speculated that protocadherins may play a role in evolution of neuronal complexity. While protocadherin genes
are highly conserved in vertebrates, EST evidence from the locus suggests apparently species-specific cis-antisense transcripts.
Novel cis-antisense transcripts, which partially overlap the PCDHα12 variable exon, PCDHβ3 single-exon gene, and PCDHψ5 unprocessed
pseudogene in the human 5q31 PCDHα/β/γ gene cluster and which are coexpressed with sense-strand transcripts in fetal and adult
brain, were identified computationally and validated by gene-specific strand-specific reverse transcriptase PCR (SSRTPCR)
and sequencing. Absence of antisense transcripts arising from equivalent genomic locations in mouse indicates that the antisense
transcripts originated in the primates after the primate-rodent divergence. Furthermore, not all expected orthologues of human
sense and antisense PCDH transcripts were detected in rhesus macaque brain, implying that protocadherin expression patterns
differ between primate species. RT followed by quantitative real-time PCR (QPCR) analysis of the three genes in the brain
of all three species, and of the PCDHβ15 gene paralogous to PCDHψ5 in human and rhesus, revealed that the presence of antisense
transcripts was significantly associated with lower sense expression levels across all orthologues. This inverse relationship,
along with the pattern of sense and antisense coexpression in the brain, is consistent with a regulatory role for the primate-specific
PCDH cis-antisense transcripts, which may represent recent evolutionary inventions modulating the activity of this conserved
gene cluster.
Keywords Protocadherin - Antisense - Primate-specific - Gene birth - Noncoding RNA
[Reviewing Editor: Dr. Manyuan Long]