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High recombination rates and hotspots in a Plasmodium falciparum genetic cross

Authors :
Jian Li
Karen Hayton
Vivek Gopalan
Gilean McVean
Sudhir Varma
Bruce L. Henschen
Ming Yi
Martine Zilversmit
Philip Awadalla
Xin-zhuan Su
Thomas E. Wellems
Vijayaraj Nagarajan
Hongying Jiang
Robert M. Stephens
Na Li
Jianbing Mu
Source :
Genome Biology
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum survives pressures from the host immune system and antimalarial drugs by modifying its genome. Genetic recombination and nucleotide substitution are the two major mechanisms that the parasite employs to generate genome diversity. A better understanding of these mechanisms may provide important information for studying parasite evolution, immune evasion and drug resistance. RESULTS: Here, we used a high-density tiling array to estimate the genetic recombination rate among 32 progeny of a P. falciparum genetic cross (7G8 × GB4). We detected 638 recombination events and constructed a high-resolution genetic map. Comparing genetic and physical maps, we obtained an overall recombination rate of 9.6 kb per centimorgan and identified 54 candidate recombination hotspots. Similar to centromeres in other organisms, the sequences of P. falciparum centromeres are found in chromosome regions largely devoid of recombination activity. Motifs enriched in hotspots were also identified, including a 12-bp G/C-rich motif with 3-bp periodicity that may interact with a protein containing 11 predicted zinc finger arrays. CONCLUSIONS: These results show that the P. falciparum genome has a high recombination rate, although it also follows the overall rule of meiosis in eukaryotes with an average of approximately one crossover per chromosome per meiosis. GC-rich repetitive motifs identified in the hotspot sequences may play a role in the high recombination rate observed. The lack of recombination activity in centromeric regions is consistent with the observations of reduced recombination near the centromeres of other organisms.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....38a25aa59a509375d60f3e6ec131727b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/gb-2011-12-4-r33