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Variation in recombination frequency and distribution across eukaryotes: patterns and processes

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TLDR
The patterns of, and processes governing recombination in eukaryotes are explored, and how variation in rate and distribution relates to genome architecture, genetic and epigenetic mechanisms, sex, environmental perturbations and variable selective pressures is discussed.
Abstract
Recombination, the exchange of DNA between maternal and paternal chromosomes during meiosis, is an essential feature of sexual reproduction in nearly all multicellular organisms. While the role of recombination in the evolution of sex has received theoretical and empirical attention, less is known about how recombination rate itself evolves and what influence this has on evolutionary processes within sexually reproducing organisms. Here, we explore the patterns of, and processes governing recombination in eukaryotes. We summarize patterns of variation, integrating current knowledge with an analysis of linkage map data in 353 organisms. We then discuss proximate and ultimate processes governing recombination rate variation and consider how these influence evolutionary processes. Genome-wide recombination rates (cM/Mb) can vary more than tenfold across eukaryotes, and there is large variation in the distribution of recombination events across closely related taxa, populations and individuals. We discuss how variation in rate and distribution relates to genome architecture, genetic and epigenetic mechanisms, sex, environmental perturbations and variable selective pressures. There has been great progress in determining the molecular mechanisms governing recombination, and with the continued development of new modelling and empirical approaches, there is now also great opportunity to further our understanding of how and why recombination rate varies. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Evolutionary causes and consequences of recombination rate variation in sexual organisms’.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Meta-analysis of chromosome-scale crossover rate variation in eukaryotes and its significance to evolutionary genomics.

TL;DR: It is highlighted that chromosome‐scale heterogeneity in crossover rate should urgently be incorporated into analytical tools in evolutionary genomics, and in the interpretation of resulting patterns, to generate predictable broad‐scale trends in genetic diversity and population differentiation by modifying the impact of natural selection among regions within a genome.

Cattle Sex-Specific Recombination Maps and Genetic Control from a Large Pedigree Analysis

Li Ma
TL;DR: From a large USDA dairy cattle pedigree with over half a million genotyped animals, this work extracted 186,927 three-generation families, identified over 8.5 million maternal and paternal recombination events, and constructed sex-specific recombination maps for 59,309 autosomal SNPs, revealing new insights into the understanding of cattle and mammalian recombination.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simultaneous repression of multiple bacterial genes using nonrepetitive extra-long sgRNA arrays.

TL;DR: Using ELSAs, three highly selective phenotypes in Escherichia coli are created, including redirecting metabolism to increase succinic acid production by 150-fold, knocking down amino acid biosynthesis to create a multi-auxotrophic strain and repressing stress responses to reduce persister cell formation by 21-fold.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex Differences in the Recombination Landscape.

TL;DR: It is found that recombination is biased toward telomeres in males and more uniformly distributed in females in most vertebrates and many other eukaryotes.
Journal ArticleDOI

A beginner's guide to low-coverage whole genome sequencing for population genomics.

TL;DR: An overview of software packages that explicitly account for genotype uncertainty in different types of population genomic inference is provided, and the potential for using imputation to bolster inference from lcWGS data in non-model species is assessed.
References
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TL;DR: JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive.
Journal ArticleDOI

To err (meiotically) is human: the genesis of human aneuploidy

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The effect of linkage on limits to artificial selection.

TL;DR: It was shown that the selection process can be completely specified by Ni α, Ni βand Nc and the initial gene frequencies and linkage disequilibrium coefficient and it is easily possible to generalize from computer runs at only one population size.
Book

The Masterpiece of Nature: The Evolution and Genetics of Sexuality

Graham Bell
TL;DR: The Masterpiece of Nature examines sex as representative of the most important challenge to the modern theory of evolution and suggests that sex evolved, not as the result of normal Darwinian processes of natural selection, but through competition between populations or species as discussed by the authors.
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