Mutagen-induced chromatid aberrations are not DNA as well as in FokI sequences of the field bean randomly distributed along the metaphase chromo-after exposure to MNU. In either case, similar numsomes. In the field bean (Vicia faba), defined late-bers of adducts per nucleotide were found immedirepli
Molecular features of meiotic recombination hot spots
โ Scribed by K.T. Nishant; M.R.S. Rao
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 322 KB
- Volume
- 28
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0265-9247
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
Meiotic recombination occurs preferentially at certain regions called hot spots and is important for generating genetic diversity and proper segregation of chromosomes during meiosis. Hot spots have been characterized most extensively in yeast, mice and humans. The development of methods based on sperm typing and population genetics has facilitated rapid and highโresolution mapping of hot spots in mice and humans in recent years. With increasing information becoming available on meiotic recombination in different species, it is now possible to compare several molecular features associated with hotโspot loci. Further, there have been advances in our knowledge of the factors influencing hotโspot activity and the role that they play in structuring the genome into haplotype blocks. We review the molecular features associated with hot spots in terms of their properties and mechanisms underlying their function and distribution. A large number of these features seem to be shared among hot spots from different species suggesting common mechanisms for their formation and function. BioEssays 28:45โ56, 2006. ยฉ 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
We analyzed the replication pattern and the topological organization of a 200 kb long Chinese hamster polygenic locus, which spans the boundary of two isochores. One of them is G C rich while the second one is highly A T rich. Previous analysis of mutants ampliยฎed for this locus had identiยฎed, withi
Various recombination-deficient mutants of B. subtilis, which are readily transformable by plasmid DNA at 42 degrees C cannot be transformed at 30 degrees C with chimeric plasmid derivatives that contain the deletion hot spot defined previously (Alonso and Trautner 1985a, b). Such interference was a
## Mutations at the MEFV gene cause, with various degrees of penetrance, familial Mediterranean fever (FMF). This disease is more prevalent in the Middle East than elsewhere, and most studies have focused on those populations. However, FMF occurs also in the Western Mediterranean and these populat