A Combination of cis and trans Control Can Solve the Hotspot Conversion Paradox
- 1 March 2008
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Genetics
- Vol. 178 (3) , 1579-1593
- https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.107.084061
Abstract
There is growing evidence that in a variety of organisms the majority of meiotic recombination events occur at a relatively small fraction of loci, known as recombination hotspots. If hotspot activity results from the DNA sequence at or near the hotspot itself (in cis), these hotspots are expected to be rapidly lost due to biased gene conversion, unless there is strong selection in favor of the hotspot itself. This phenomenon makes it very difficult to maintain existing hotspots and even more difficult for new hotspots to evolve; it has therefore come to be known as the “hotspot conversion paradox.” I develop an analytical framework for exploring the evolution of recombination hotspots under the forces of selection, mutation, and conversion. I derive the general conditions under which cis- and trans-controlled hotspots can be maintained, as well as those under which new hotspots controlled by both a cis and a trans locus can invade a population. I show that the conditions for maintenance of and invasion by trans- or cis-plus-trans-controlled hotspots are broader than for those controlled entirely in cis. Finally, I show that a combination of cis and trans control may allow for long-lived polymorphisms in hotspot activity, the patterns of which may explain some recently observed features of recombination hotspots.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- A second generation human haplotype map of over 3.1 million SNPsNature, 2007
- Cis- and Trans-Acting Elements Regulate the Mouse Psmb9 Meiotic Recombination HotspotPLoS Genetics, 2007
- A population genetics model with recombination hotspots that are heterogeneous across the populationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Live Hot, Die Young: Transmission Distortion in Recombination HotspotsPLoS Genetics, 2007
- New Small Nuclear RNA Gene-Like Transcriptional Units as Sources of Regulatory TranscriptsPLoS Genetics, 2007
- A worldwide survey of haplotype variation and linkage disequilibrium in the human genomeNature Genetics, 2006
- Variation in crossing-over rates across chromosome 4 of Arabidopsis thaliana reveals the presence of meiotic recombination “hot spots”Genome Research, 2005
- What's So Hot about Recombination Hotspots?PLoS Biology, 2004
- Absence of the TAP2 Human Recombination Hotspot in ChimpanzeesPLoS Biology, 2004
- Recombination occurs uniformly within the bronze gene, a meiotic recombination hotspot in the maize genome.Plant Cell, 1997