McVean Gilean A T, Myers Simon R, Hunt Sarah, Deloukas Panos, Bentley David R, Donnelly Peter
Department of Statistics, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3TG, UK.
Science. 2004 Apr 23;304(5670):581-4. doi: 10.1126/science.1092500.
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.
对于大多数物种而言,重组率变异的性质和规模在很大程度上尚不清楚。在人类中,系谱分析记录了染色体水平的变异,而精子研究则识别出了交叉事件聚集的特定热点。为了确定这一情况是否代表了整个基因组,我们开发并验证了一种从遗传变异模式估计重组率的方法。通过对欧洲和非洲人群进行广泛的单核苷酸多态性调查,我们发现存在跨越四个数量级的极端局部率变异的证据,其中50%的重组事件发生在不到10%的序列中。我们证明重组热点是人类基因组的普遍特征,平均每200千碱基或更短距离就会出现一次,但重组优先发生在基因之外。