Kulathinal Rob J, Bennett Sarah M, Fitzpatrick Courtney L, Noor Mohamed A F
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Jul 22;105(29):10051-6. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0801848105. Epub 2008 Jul 11.
Regional rates of recombination often correlate with levels of nucleotide diversity, and either selective or neutral hypotheses can explain this relationship. Regional recombination rates also correlate with nucleotide differences between human and chimpanzee, consistent with models where recombination is mutagenic; however, a lack of correlation is observed in the Drosophila melanogaster group, consistent with models invoking natural selection. Here, we revisit the relationship among recombination, diversity, and interspecies difference by generating empirical estimates of these parameters in Drosophila pseudoobscura. To measure recombination rate, we genotyped 1,294 backcross hybrids at 50 markers across the largest assembled linkage group in this species. Genome-wide diversity was estimated by sequencing a second isolate of D. pseudoobscura at shallow coverage. Alignment to the sequenced genome of the closely related species, Drosophila persimilis, provided nucleotide site orthology. Our findings demonstrate that scale is critical in determining correlates to recombination rate: fine-scale cross-over rate estimates are far stronger predictors of both diversity and interspecies difference than broad-scale estimates. The correlation of fine-scale recombination rate to diversity and interspecies difference appears to be genome-wide, evidenced by examination of an X-linked region in greater detail. Because we observe a strong correlation of cross-over rate with interspecies difference, even after correcting for segregating ancestral variation, we suggest that both mutagenic and selective forces generate these correlations, the latter in regions of low crossing over. We propose that it is not cross-overs per se that are mutagenic, but rather repair of DNA double-strand break precursors via crossing over and gene conversion.
区域重组率通常与核苷酸多样性水平相关,选择性或中性假说都可以解释这种关系。区域重组率也与人类和黑猩猩之间的核苷酸差异相关,这与重组具有诱变作用的模型一致;然而,在黑腹果蝇群体中观察到缺乏相关性,这与援引自然选择的模型一致。在这里,我们通过在拟暗果蝇中对这些参数进行实证估计,重新审视重组、多样性和种间差异之间的关系。为了测量重组率,我们对该物种最大组装连锁群上的50个标记的1294个回交杂种进行了基因分型。通过对拟暗果蝇的第二个分离株进行浅覆盖测序来估计全基因组多样性。与密切相关物种果蝇的测序基因组进行比对,提供了核苷酸位点的直系同源性。我们的研究结果表明,规模在确定与重组率的相关性方面至关重要:精细尺度的交叉率估计比宽泛尺度的估计更能预测多样性和种间差异。通过更详细地检查X连锁区域可以证明,精细尺度的重组率与多样性和种间差异的相关性似乎是全基因组范围的。因为即使在校正了分离的祖先变异后,我们仍观察到交叉率与种间差异之间存在很强的相关性,所以我们认为诱变和选择力都产生了这些相关性,后者存在于低交叉区域。我们提出,具有诱变作用的并非交叉本身,而是通过交叉和基因转换对DNA双链断裂前体的修复。