今日推荐

2001 - Current topics in developmental biology

Mechanism and control of meiotic recombination initiation.

0 阅读

Homologous recombination is essential during meiosis in most sexually reproducing organisms. In budding yeast, and most likely in other organisms as well, meiotic recombination proceeds via the formation and repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). These breaks appear to be formed by the Spo11 protein, with assistance from a large number of other gene products, by a topoisomerase-like transesterase mechanism. Recent studies in fission yeast, multicellular fungi, flies, worms, plants, and mammals indicate that the role of Spo11 in meiotic recombination initiation is highly conserved. This chapter reviews the properties of Spo11 and the other gene products required for meiotic DSB formation in a number of organisms and discusses ways in which recombination initiation is coordinated with other events occurring in the meiotic cell.

2013 - Nucleic Acids Research

iRSpot-PseDNC: identify recombination spots with pseudo dinucleotide composition

Meiotic recombination is an important biological process. As a main driving force of evolution, recombination provides natural new combinations of genetic variations. Rather than randomly occurring across a genome, meiotic recombination takes place in some genomic regions (the so-called ‘hotspots’) with higher frequencies, and in the other regions (the so-called ‘coldspots’) with lower frequencies. Therefore, the information of the hotspots and coldspots would provide useful insights for in-depth studying of the mechanism of recombination and the genome evolution process as well. So far, the recombination regions have been mainly determined by experiments, which are both expensive and time-consuming. With the avalanche of genome sequences generated in the postgenomic age, it is highly desired to develop automated methods for rapidly and effectively identifying the recombination regions. In this study, a predictor, called ‘iRSpot-PseDNC’, was developed for identifying the recombination hotspots and coldspots. In the new predictor, the samples of DNA sequences are formulated by a novel feature vector, the so-called ‘pseudo dinucleotide composition’ (PseDNC), into which six local DNA structural properties, i.e. three angular parameters (twist, tilt and roll) and three translational parameters (shift, slide and rise), are incorporated. It was observed by the rigorous jackknife test that the overall success rate achieved by iRSpot-PseDNC was >82% in identifying recombination spots in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, indicating the new predictor is promising or at least may become a complementary tool to the existing methods in this area. Although the benchmark data set used to train and test the current method was from S. cerevisiae, the basic approaches can also be extended to deal with all the other genomes. Particularly, it has not escaped our notice that the PseDNC approach can be also used to study many other DNA-related problems. As a user-friendly web-server, iRSpot-PseDNC is freely accessible at http://lin.uestc.edu.cn/server/iRSpot-PseDNC.

2011 - Cell

A Hierarchical Combination of Factors Shapes the Genome-wide Topography of Yeast Meiotic Recombination Initiation

The nonrandom distribution of meiotic recombination influences patterns of inheritance and genome evolution, but chromosomal features governing this distribution are poorly understood. Formation of the DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) that initiate recombination results in the accumulation of Spo11 protein covalently bound to small DNA fragments. By sequencing these fragments, we uncover a genome-wide DSB map of unprecedented resolution and sensitivity. We use this map to explore how DSB distribution is influenced by large-scale chromosome structures, chromatin, transcription factors, and local sequence composition. Our analysis offers mechanistic insight into DSB formation and early processing steps, supporting the view that the recombination terrain is molded by combinatorial and hierarchical interaction of factors that work on widely different size scales. This map illuminates the occurrence of DSBs in repetitive DNA elements, repair of which can lead to chromosomal rearrangements. We also discuss implications for evolutionary dynamics of recombination hot spots.

论文关键词

genetic algorithm positioning system process control sample size solar cell visible light dna sequence learning object indoor positioning received signal strength statistical process control indoor localization quantum dot statistical proces indoor positioning system count datum hecke algebra factorial design ieee standard binding site escherichia coli weighted moving average knowledge structure statistical quality control poisson structure cell cycle choice behavior econometric model quality level exponentially weighted moving fractional factorial design saccharomyces cerevisiae selection bia affine weyl group statistical process monitoring power conversion efficiency dye-sensitized solar cell charge transport uniform resource identifier learning object metadatum embryonic stem cell moving average control object class dye-sensitized solar reusable learning object linkage disequilibrium quantity discount spatial process spatial econometric population parameter embryonic stem reusable learning object metadatum heterojunction solar cell dna repair location fingerprinting cell development indoor positioning technique spatial econometric model radiation tolerance heterojunction solar genetic linkage signal peptide bulk heterojunction dna segment recombination rate bulk heterojunction solar dna recombination wifi-based indoor localization surface recombination escherichia coli. low-density lipoprotein indoor positioning solution proposed positioning system surface recombination velocity solar cells. neisseria meningitidi genetic heterogeneity learning object review dna break xrcc5 wt allele xrcc5 gene t cell receptor v(d)j recombination v(d)j recombination-activating protein 1 excretory function neuritis, autoimmune, experimental leukemia, b-cell dna sequence rearrangement immunoglobulin class switch recombination immunoglobulin class switching lipoprotein receptor dna breaks, double-stranded telomere maintenance v(d)j recombination genome encoded entity vdj recombinase recombination, genetic crossover (genetic algorithm) meiotic recombination homologous recombination