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Genetic analysis of variation in human meiotic recombination
Authors
A Kong
A Kong
+26 more
AI Su
B Lassalle
Eleanor Feingold
FW Stahl
G Coop
G Lamprecht
Gregory P. Copenhaver
H Bastos
H Stefansson
KA Henderson
KW Broman
LA Weiss
NE Lamb
Philippe R. J. Bois
PM Petkov
Reshmi Chowdhury
S Keeney
S Purcell
S Shifman
Stephanie L. Sherman
T Barrett
T Hassold
TR Dawber
VG Cheung
Vivian G. Cheung
Y Li
Publication date
1 September 2009
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
The number of recombination events per meiosis varies extensively among individuals. This recombination phenotype differs between female and male, and also among individuals of each gender. In this study, we used high-density SNP genotypes of over 2,300 individuals and their offspring in two datasets to characterize recombination landscape and to map the genetic variants that contribute to variation in recombination phenotypes. We found six genetic loci that are associated with recombination phenotypes. Two of these (RNF212 and an inversion on chromosome 17q21.31) were previously reported in the Icelandic population, and this is the first replication in any other population. Of the four newly identified loci (KIAA1462, PDZK1, UGCG, NUB1), results from expression studies provide support for their roles in meiosis. Each of the variants that we identified explains only a small fraction of the individual variation in recombination. Notably, we found different sequence variants associated with female and male recombination phenotypes, suggesting that they are regulated by different genes. Characterization of genetic variants that influence natural variation in meiotic recombination will lead to a better understanding of normal meiotic events as well as of non-disjunction, the primary cause of pregnancy loss. © 2009 Chowdhury et al
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