Recent experiments using sperm typing have demonstrated that, in several regions of the human genome, recombination does not occur uniformly but instead is concentrated in “hotspots” of 1–2 kb. Moreover, the crossover asymmetry observed in a subset of these has led to the suggestion that hotspots may be short-lived on an evolutionary time scale. To test this possibility, we focused on a region known to contain a recombination hotspot in humans, TAP2, and asked whether chimpanzees, the closest living evolutionary relatives of humans, harbor a hotspot in a similar location. Specifically, we used a new statistical approach to estimate recombination rate variation from patterns of linkage disequilibrium in a sample of 24 western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus). This method has been shown to produce reliable results on simulated data and on human data from the TAP2 region. Strikingly, however, it finds very little support for recombination rate variation at TAP2 in the western chimpanzee data. Moreover, simulations suggest that there should be stronger support if there were a hotspot similar to the one characterized in humans. Thus, it appears that the human TAP2 recombination hotspot is not shared by western chimpanzees. These findings demonstrate that fine-scale recombination rates can change between very closely related species and raise the possibility that rates differ among human populations, with important implications for linkage-disequilibrium based association studies.
Absence of the TAP2 Human Recombination Hotspot in Chimpanzees
S. Ptak,A. D. Roeder,M. Stephens,Y. Gilad,S. Pääbo,M. Przeworski
Published 2004 in PLoS Biology
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2004
- Venue
PLoS Biology
- Publication date
2004-06-01
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
CONCEPTS
- human tap2 recombination hotspot
The TAP2 hotspot previously characterized in humans and used as the comparison point in this study.
Aliases: human TAP2 hotspot
- linkage disequilibrium
Non-random association of alleles across loci that was used here to infer local recombination-rate variation.
Aliases: LD
- recombination hotspot
A short genomic interval with locally elevated recombination rate relative to surrounding sequence.
Aliases: hotspot
- simulations
Computer-generated datasets used to evaluate how strongly a hotspot signal should appear under different scenarios.
Aliases: simulated data
- statistical recombination-rate inference method
A statistical approach for estimating recombination rate variation from linkage-disequilibrium patterns.
Aliases: new statistical approach
- tap2 region
The genomic region around the TAP2 locus that was examined for fine-scale recombination differences.
Aliases: TAP2
- western chimpanzee sample
The set of 24 Pan troglodytes verus individuals used for the linkage-disequilibrium analysis.
Aliases: western chimpanzees, Pan troglodytes verus
REFERENCES
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