posted on 2007-05-01, 12:43authored byAlec J. Jeffreys, Rita Neumann
Little is known about factors that influence the frequency and distribution of meiotic
recombination events within human crossover hotspots. We now describe the detailed
analysis of sperm recombination in the NID1 hotspot. Like the neighbouring MS32 hotspot, the NID1 hotspot is associated with a minisatellite, suggesting that hotspots
predispose DNA to tandem repetition. Unlike MS32, crossover resolution breakpoints in
NID1 avoid the minisatellite, producing a cold spot within the hotspot. This avoidance
may be related to the palindromic nature of the minisatellite interfering with the
generation and/or processing of recombination intermediates. The NID1 hotspot also contains a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) close to the centre which appears to directly influence the frequency of crossover initiation. Quantitative gene conversion assays show that this SNP affects the frequency of gene conversion and crossover to a very similar extent, providing evidence that conversions and crossovers are triggered by the same recombination initiating events. The recombination-suppressing allele is overtransmitted to recombinant progeny, and provides the most dramatic example to date of
recombination-mediated meiotic drive, of a magnitude sufficient to virtually guarantee
that the recombination suppressor will eventually replace the more active allele in human populations.
History
Citation
Human Molecular Genetics, 2005, 14, pp.2277-2287
Published in
Human Molecular Genetics
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Available date
2007-05-01
Notes
This is a pre-copy-editing, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Human Molecular Genetics following peer review. The definitive publisher-authenticated version [Human Molecular Genetics 2005, 14, pp.2277-2287] is available online at: http://hmg.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/14/15/2277