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      Rates of Recombination in the Ribosomal DNA of Apomictically Propagated Daphnia obtusa Lines

      , , ,
      Genetics
      Genetics Society of America

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          Abstract

          Ribosomal (r)DNA undergoes concerted evolution, the mechanisms of which are unequal crossing over and gene conversion. Despite the fundamental importance of these mechanisms to the evolution of rDNA, their rates have been estimated only in a few model species. We estimated recombination rate in rDNA by quantifying the relative frequency of intraindividual length variants in an expansion segment of the 18S rRNA gene of the cladoceran crustacean, Daphnia obtusa, in four apomictically propagated lines. We also used quantitative PCR to estimate rDNA copy number. The apomictic lines were sampled every 5 generations for 90 generations, and we considered each significant change in the frequency distribution of length variants between time intervals to be the result of a recombination event. Using this method, we calculated the recombination rate for this region to be 0.02-0.06 events/generation on the basis of three different estimates of rDNA copy number. In addition, we observed substantial changes in rDNA copy number within and between lines. Estimates of haploid copy number varied from 53 to 233, with a mean of 150. We also measured the relative frequency of length variants in 30 lines at generations 5, 50, and 90. Although length variant frequencies changed significantly within and between lines, the overall average frequency of each length variant did not change significantly between the three generations sampled, suggesting that there is little or no bias in the direction of change due to recombination.

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          Most cited references16

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          The fine-scale structure of recombination rate variation in the human genome.

          The nature and scale of recombination rate variation are largely unknown for most species. In humans, pedigree analysis has documented variation at the chromosomal level, and sperm studies have identified specific hotspots in which crossing-over events cluster. To address whether this picture is representative of the genome as a whole, we have developed and validated a method for estimating recombination rates from patterns of genetic variation. From extensive single-nucleotide polymorphism surveys in European and African populations, we find evidence for extreme local rate variation spanning four orders in magnitude, in which 50% of all recombination events take place in less than 10% of the sequence. We demonstrate that recombination hotspots are a ubiquitous feature of the human genome, occurring on average every 200 kilobases or less, but recombination occurs preferentially outside genes.
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            Molecular drive: a cohesive mode of species evolution.

            G. Dover (1982)
            It is generally accepted that mutations may become fixed in a population by natural selection and genetic drift. In the case of many families of genes and noncoding sequences, however, fixation of mutations within a population may proceed as a consequence of molecular mechanisms of turnover within the genome. These mechanisms can be both random and directional in activity. There are circumstances in which the unusual concerted pattern of fixation permits the establishment of biological novelty and species discontinuities in a manner not predicted by the classical genetics of natural selection and genetic drift.
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              Estimating recombination rates from population-genetic data.

              Obtaining an accurate measure of how recombination rates vary across the genome has implications for understanding the molecular basis of recombination, its evolutionary significance and the distribution of linkage disequilibrium in natural populations. Although measuring the recombination rate is experimentally challenging, good estimates can be obtained by applying population-genetic methods to DNA sequences taken from natural populations. Statistical methods are now providing insights into the nature and scale of variation in the recombination rate, particularly in humans. Such knowledge will become increasingly important owing to the growing use of population-genetic methods in biomedical research.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Genetics
                Genetics
                Genetics Society of America
                0016-6731
                1943-2631
                January 23 2007
                January 2007
                January 2007
                November 16 2006
                : 175
                : 1
                : 311-320
                Article
                10.1534/genetics.105.050229
                1775004
                17110499
                b79313a4-e974-4cfb-b839-027d524169fd
                © 2006
                History

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