Publication | Open Access
Variants of the protein PRDM9 differentially regulate a set of human meiotic recombination hotspots highly active in African populations
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Citations
26
References
2011
Year
Prdm9 RegulationPrdm9 VariantsGeneticsGenomic MechanismMolecular GeneticsGenomicsReproductive BiologyEpigeneticsMolecular EcologyPublic HealthProtein Prdm9Genetic PredispositionHaplotype DeterminationSystems BiologyCell DivisionMeiosisGameteStatistical GeneticsGenetic VariationChromosomal RearrangementPopulation GeneticsAfrican PopulationsDevelopmental BiologyEvolutionary BiologyChromosome BiologyPrdm9 GenotypesRecombination DynamicGenetic AdmixturePopulation GenomicsMedicine
PRDM9 is a major specifier of human meiotic recombination hotspots, probably via binding of its zinc-finger repeat array to a DNA sequence motif associated with hotspots. However, our view of PRDM9 regulation, in terms of motifs defined and hotspots studied, has a strong bias toward the PRDM9 A variant particularly common in Europeans. We show that population diversity can reveal a second class of hotspots specifically activated by PRDM9 variants common in Africans but rare in Europeans. These African-enhanced hotspots nevertheless share very similar properties with their counterparts activated by the A variant. The specificity of hotspot activation is such that individuals with differing PRDM9 genotypes, even within the same population, can use substantially if not completely different sets of hotspots. Each African-enhanced hotspot is activated by a distinct spectrum of PRDM9 variants, despite the fact that all are predicted to bind the same sequence motif. This differential activation points to complex interactions between the zinc-finger array and hotspots and identifies features of the array that might be important in controlling hotspot activity.
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