Alu repeats increase local recombination rates

Item Type Journal Article
Author David Witherspoon
Author W Scott Watkins
Author Yuhua Zhang
Author Jinchuan Xing
Author Whitney Tolpinrud
Author Dale Hedges
Author Mark Batzer
Author Lynn Jorde
URL http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/10/530
Volume 10
Issue 1
Pages 530
Publication BMC Genomics
ISSN 1471-2164
Date 2009
DOI 10.1186/1471-2164-10-530
Accessed 2009-12-30 14:28:37
Library Catalog BioMed Central and More
Abstract BACKGROUND:Recombination rates vary widely across the human genome, but little of that variation is correlated with known DNA sequence features. The genome contains more than one million Alu mobile element insertions, and these insertions have been implicated in non-homologous recombination, modulation of DNA methylation, and transcriptional regulation. If individual Alu insertions have even modest effects on local recombination rates, they could collectively have a significant impact on the pattern of linkage disequilibrium in the human genome and on the evolution of the Alu family itself.RESULTS:We carried out sequencing, SNP identification, and SNP genotyping around 19 AluY insertion loci in 347 individuals sampled from diverse populations, then used the SNP genotypes to estimate local recombination rates around the AluY loci. The loci and SNPs were chosen so as to minimize other factors (such as SNP ascertainment bias and SNP density) that could influence recombination rate estimates. We detected a significant increase in recombination rate within ~2 kb of the AluY insertions in our African population sample. To test this observation against a larger set of AluY insertions, we applied our locus- and SNP-selection design and analyses to the HapMap Phase II data. In that data set, we observed a significantly increased recombination rate near AluY insertions in both the CEU and YRI populations.CONCLUSION:We show that the presence of a fixed AluY insertion is significantly predictive of an elevated local recombination rate within 2 kb of the insertion, independent of other known predictors. The magnitude of this effect, approximately a 6% increase, is comparable to the effects of some recombinogenic DNA sequence motifs identified via their association with recombination hot spots.
Title Alu repeats increase local recombination rates
Date Added 2009-12-30 09:28
Date Modified 2009-12-30 09:28

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