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Contrasted patterns of crossover and non-crossover at Arabidopsis thaliana meiotic recombination hotspots.


ABSTRACT: The vast majority of meiotic recombination events (crossovers (COs) and non-crossovers (NCOs)) cluster in narrow hotspots surrounded by large regions devoid of recombinational activity. Here, using a new molecular approach in plants, called "pollen-typing", we detected and characterized hundreds of CO and NCO molecules in two different hotspot regions in Arabidopsis thaliana. This analysis revealed that COs are concentrated in regions of a few kilobases where their rates reach up to 50 times the genome average. The hotspots themselves tend to cluster in regions less than 8 kilobases in size with overlapping CO distribution. Non-crossover (NCO) events also occurred in the two hotspots but at very different levels (local CO/NCO ratios of 1/1 and 30/1) and their track lengths were quite small (a few hundred base pairs). We also showed that the ZMM protein MSH4 plays a role in CO formation and somewhat unexpectedly we also found that it is involved in the generation of NCOs but with a different level of effect. Finally, factors acting in cis and in trans appear to shape the rate and distribution of COs at meiotic recombination hotspots.

SUBMITTER: Drouaud J 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3828143 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Contrasted patterns of crossover and non-crossover at Arabidopsis thaliana meiotic recombination hotspots.

Drouaud Jan J   Khademian Hossein H   Giraut Laurène L   Zanni Vanessa V   Bellalou Sarah S   Henderson Ian R IR   Falque Matthieu M   Mézard Christine C  

PLoS genetics 20131114 11


The vast majority of meiotic recombination events (crossovers (COs) and non-crossovers (NCOs)) cluster in narrow hotspots surrounded by large regions devoid of recombinational activity. Here, using a new molecular approach in plants, called "pollen-typing", we detected and characterized hundreds of CO and NCO molecules in two different hotspot regions in Arabidopsis thaliana. This analysis revealed that COs are concentrated in regions of a few kilobases where their rates reach up to 50 times the  ...[more]

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