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. 1995 Sep 1;5(9):1030-5.
doi: 10.1016/s0960-9822(95)00207-7.

Imprinted chromosomal regions of the human genome display sex-specific meiotic recombination frequencies

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Free article

Imprinted chromosomal regions of the human genome display sex-specific meiotic recombination frequencies

A Pàldi et al. Curr Biol. .
Free article

Abstract

Background: Meiotic recombination events do not occur randomly along a chromosome, but appear to be restricted to specific regions. In addition, some regions in the genome undergo recombination more frequently in the germ cells of one sex than the other. Genomic imprinting, the process by which the two parental alleles of a gene are differentially marked, is another genetic phenomenon associated with inheritance from only one parent or the other. The mechanisms that control meiotic recombination and genomic imprinting are unknown, but both phenomena necessarily depend on the presence of some DNA signal sequences and/or on the structure of the surrounding chromatin domain.

Results: In the present study, we compared the frequencies of sex-specific recombination events in three chromosomal regions of the human genome that contain clustered imprinted genes. Alignment of the genetic and physical maps of the ZNF127-SNRPN-IPW-PAR-5-PAR-1 region on chromosome 15q11-q13 (associated with Prader-Willi and Angelman syndromes) and the IGF2-H19 region on chromosome 11p15.5 (associated with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome) shows that both regions recombine with very high frequency during male meiosis, and with very low frequency during female meiosis. A third region around the WT-1 gene on chromosome 11p13 also recombines with higher frequency during male meiosis.

Conclusions: The results show that the two best-known imprinted regions in the human genome are characterized by significant differences in recombination frequency during male and female meioses. A third, less well-characterized, imprinted region shows a similar sex-specific bias. On the basis of these observations, we propose a model suggesting that the region-specific differential accessibility of DNA that leads to differential recombination rates during male and female meioses also leads to the male- and female-specific modification of the signal sequences that control genomic imprinting.

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