Zeng Jia, Yi Soojin V
School of Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia Tech.
School of Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia Tech
Genome Biol Evol. 2014 Oct 16;6(10):2918-29. doi: 10.1093/gbe/evu230.
Recombination clusters nonuniformly across mammalian genomes at discrete genomic loci referred to as recombination hotspots. Despite their ubiquitous presence, individual hotspots rapidly lose their activities, and the molecular and evolutionary mechanisms underlying such frequent hotspot turnovers (the so-called "recombination hotspot paradox") remain unresolved. Even though some sequence motifs are significantly associated with hotspots, multiple lines of evidence indicate that factors other than underlying sequences, such as epigenetic modifications, may affect the evolution of recombination hotspots. Thus, identifying epigenetic factors that covary with recombination at fine-scale is a promising step for this important research area. It was previously reported that recombination rates correlate with indirect measures of DNA methylation in the human genome. Here, we analyze experimentally determined DNA methylation and histone modification of human sperms, and show that the correlation between DNA methylation and recombination in long-range windows does not hold with respect to the spatial and temporal variation of recombination at hotspots. On the other hand, two histone modifications (H3K4me3 and H3K27me3) overlap extensively with recombination hotspots. Similar trends were observed in mice. These results indicate that specific histone modifications rather than DNA methylation are associated with the rapid evolution of recombination hotspots. Furthermore, many human recombination hotspots occupy "bivalent" chromatin regions that harbor both active (H3K4me3) and repressive (H3K27me3) marks. This may explain why human recombination hotspots tend to occur in nongenic regions, in contrast to yeast and Arabidopsis hotspots that are characterized by generally active chromatins. Our results highlight the dynamic epigenetic underpinnings of recombination hotspot evolution.
重组在哺乳动物基因组中以离散的基因组位点非均匀地聚集,这些位点被称为重组热点。尽管它们普遍存在,但单个热点会迅速失去其活性,而这种频繁的热点更替背后的分子和进化机制(即所谓的“重组热点悖论”)仍未得到解决。尽管一些序列基序与热点显著相关,但多方面的证据表明,除了基础序列之外的因素,如表观遗传修饰,可能会影响重组热点的进化。因此,在精细尺度上识别与重组共变的表观遗传因素是这一重要研究领域的一个有前景的步骤。此前有报道称,人类基因组中的重组率与DNA甲基化的间接测量值相关。在这里,我们分析了实验确定的人类精子的DNA甲基化和组蛋白修饰,并表明在长程窗口中,DNA甲基化与重组之间的相关性并不适用于热点处重组的时空变化。另一方面,两种组蛋白修饰(H3K4me3和H3K27me3)与重组热点广泛重叠。在小鼠中也观察到了类似的趋势。这些结果表明,特定的组蛋白修饰而非DNA甲基化与重组热点的快速进化相关。此外,许多人类重组热点占据了同时具有活性(H3K4me3)和抑制性(H3K27me3)标记的“双价”染色质区域。这或许可以解释为什么人类重组热点倾向于出现在非基因区域,这与以普遍活跃的染色质为特征的酵母和拟南芥热点形成对比。我们的结果突出了重组热点进化的动态表观遗传基础。