- Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin;
- Garber, Manuel;
- Zuk, Or;
- Lin, Michael F;
- Parker, Brian J;
- Washietl, Stefan;
- Kheradpour, Pouya;
- Ernst, Jason;
- Jordan, Gregory;
- Mauceli, Evan;
- Ward, Lucas D;
- Lowe, Craig B;
- Holloway, Alisha K;
- Clamp, Michele;
- Gnerre, Sante;
- Alföldi, Jessica;
- Beal, Kathryn;
- Chang, Jean;
- Clawson, Hiram;
- Cuff, James;
- Di Palma, Federica;
- Fitzgerald, Stephen;
- Flicek, Paul;
- Guttman, Mitchell;
- Hubisz, Melissa J;
- Jaffe, David B;
- Jungreis, Irwin;
- Kent, W James;
- Kostka, Dennis;
- Lara, Marcia;
- Martins, Andre L;
- Massingham, Tim;
- Moltke, Ida;
- Raney, Brian J;
- Rasmussen, Matthew D;
- Robinson, Jim;
- Stark, Alexander;
- Vilella, Albert J;
- Wen, Jiayu;
- Xie, Xiaohui;
- Zody, Michael C;
- Worley, Kim C;
- Kovar, Christie L;
- Muzny, Donna M;
- Gibbs, Richard A;
- Warren, Wesley C;
- Mardis, Elaine R;
- Weinstock, George M;
- Wilson, Richard K;
- Birney, Ewan;
- Margulies, Elliott H;
- Herrero, Javier;
- Green, Eric D;
- Haussler, David;
- Siepel, Adam;
- Goldman, Nick;
- Pollard, Katherine S;
- Pedersen, Jakob S;
- Lander, Eric S;
- Kellis, Manolis
The comparison of related genomes has emerged as a powerful lens for genome interpretation. Here we report the sequencing and comparative analysis of 29 eutherian genomes. We confirm that at least 5.5% of the human genome has undergone purifying selection, and locate constrained elements covering ∼4.2% of the genome. We use evolutionary signatures and comparisons with experimental data sets to suggest candidate functions for ∼60% of constrained bases. These elements reveal a small number of new coding exons, candidate stop codon readthrough events and over 10,000 regions of overlapping synonymous constraint within protein-coding exons. We find 220 candidate RNA structural families, and nearly a million elements overlapping potential promoter, enhancer and insulator regions. We report specific amino acid residues that have undergone positive selection, 280,000 non-coding elements exapted from mobile elements and more than 1,000 primate- and human-accelerated elements. Overlap with disease-associated variants indicates that our findings will be relevant for studies of human biology, health and disease.