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Polarity of Meiotic Recombination in the bronze Locus of MaizeHans Thijs and Christa Heytingaa Department of Genetics Agricultural University Dreijenlaan 2 6703 HA Wageningen The Netherlands christa.heyting@molcelgen.el.wau.nl
Meiotic recombination hotspots in plants are of considerable interest because their occurrence has important implications for the mechanism of meiotic recombination and the development of plant breeding strategies. We therefore enjoyed reading the detailed investigations of recombination events in the bronze (bz) locus of maize by
To obtain their data, which they interpret within the context of the dou-ble-strand DNA break (DSB) model for the initiation of meiotic recombina-tion,
According to the DSB model, the recombination junctions mapped by
However, polarity is usually not detected as a gradient in the frequency of recombination (or of recombination junctions), but as a gradient of gene conversion. Thus, a sensitive method for detecting recombination polarity is to compare the relative frequency of conversion of the two involved markers in heteroallelic two-point crosses (reviewed by
What is special about the two exceptions? Both of these marker pairs include the mutation E9, and so it is possible that a marker-specific effect, for instance the efficiency by which E9 is repaired in heteroduplexes, accounts for the apparent reversal in the polarity of gene conversion exhibited in these two crosses. The patterns of polymorphisms in the IGRs analyzed by Dooner and Martínez- Férez (1997) (see their Figures 4 and 5) are also compatible with a 5' to 3' polarity of gene conversion across the bz locus. With a single exception, all of the recombination junctions are located between the E and M mutations used in a cross (Figure 1), which is in agreement with conversion of the 5' E or M mutation, subsequent coconversion of adjacent mutations, and crossover resolution. Although a clear gradient of recombination junctions in the region between these two mutations is indeed debatable, the polarity of coconversion is not. Mutations that occur upstream of the 5' E or M mutation are (almost) invariably coconverted, mutations that occur between the two E or M mutations sometimes are, and mutations downstream of the 3' E or M mutation are never coconverted. This is a strong indication that there is a 5' to 3' polarity of gene conversion in the bz gene. We propose that a preferred recombination initiation site 5' to the bz locus would explain the gene conversion polarity that our reevaluation of these data has uncovered. However, this is not the only possibility. Alternative explanations are that the molecular nature of individual markers may cause a bias in the recovery of certain alleles or may affect the site(s) at which recombination is initiated.
For example, the two crosses that exhibit the most obvious polarity (Figure 1;
The crosses that involve both m1 and m2 not only show a stronger polarity of gene conversion than do other crosses, but also a lower frequency of recombination and a lower frequency of crossovers among recombinants (see Tables 2 and 3 in
REFERENCES
Dooner, H.K., and Martínez-Férez, I.M. (1997) Recombination occurs uniformly within the bronze gene, a meiotic recombination hotspot in the maize genome. Plant Cell 9:1633-1646[Abstract]. Lichten, M., and Goldman, A.S.H. (1995) Meiotic recombination hotspots. Annu. Rev. Genet. 29:423-444[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]. Whitehouse, H.L.K. (1982). Genetic Recombination: Understanding the Mechanisms. (Chichester, UK: John Wiley and Sons).
Dooner, H.K., English, J., Ralston, E., and Weck, E. (1986) A single genetic unit specifies two transposition functions in the maize element Activator.. Science 234:210-211 Martínez-Férez, I.M., and Dooner, H.K. (1997) Sesqui-Ds, the chromosome-breaking insertion at bz-m1, links double Ds to the original Ds element. Mol. Gen. Genet. 255:580-586[CrossRef][Medline].
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