Abstract

BackgroundMeiotic recombination hotspots play important roles in various aspects of genomics, but the underlying mechanisms for regulating the locations and strengths of recombination hotspots are not yet fully revealed. Most existing algorithms for estimating recombination rates from sequence polymorphism data can only output average recombination rates of a population, although there is evidence for the heterogeneity in recombination rates among individuals. For genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of recombination hotspots, an efficient algorithm that estimates the individualized strengths of recombination hotspots is highly desirable.ResultsIn this work, we propose a novel graph mining algorithm named ARG-walker, based on random walks on ancestral recombination graphs (ARG), to estimate individual-specific recombination hotspot strengths. Extensive simulations demonstrate that ARG-walker is able to distinguish the hot allele of a recombination hotspot from the cold allele. Integrated with output of ARG-walker, we performed GWAS on the phased haplotype data of the 22 autosome chromosomes of the HapMap Asian population samples of Chinese and Japanese (JPT+CHB). Significant cis-regulatory signals have been detected, which is corroborated by the enrichment of the well-known 13-mer motif CCNCCNTNNCCNC of PRDM9 protein. Moreover, two new DNA motifs have been identified in the flanking regions of the significantly associated SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms), which are likely to be new cis-regulatory elements of meiotic recombination hotspots of the human genome.ConclusionsOur results on both simulated and real data suggest that ARG-walker is a promising new method for estimating the individual recombination variations. In the future, it could be used to uncover the mechanisms of recombination regulation and human diseases related with recombination hotspots.

Highlights

  • Meiotic recombination hotspots play important roles in various aspects of genomics, but the underlying mechanisms for regulating the locations and strengths of recombination hotspots are not yet fully revealed

  • Simulation study The evolution of meiotic recombination hotspots is notoriously dynamic and complicated, partly due to processes such as biased gene conversion (BGC)

  • Large amounts of evidence from both sperm typing and genetic analyses suggest that the general patterns of recombination in the human genomes are highly unstable throughout the genome [4,9,29]

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Summary

Introduction

Meiotic recombination hotspots play important roles in various aspects of genomics, but the underlying mechanisms for regulating the locations and strengths of recombination hotspots are not yet fully revealed. For genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of recombination hotspots, an efficient algorithm that estimates the individualized strengths of recombination hotspots is highly desirable. The PRDM9 protein was found to be an important trans-regulator controlling the activity of recombination hotspots through binding to a 13-mer DNA motif (CCNCCNTNNCCNC) in the human genome [5,6,7,8]. Open questions and challenges remain, such as the recombination variation in association with gender and age, epigenetic regulators of meiotic recombination, the roles of recombination hotspots in human diseases, etc. Finding other transand cis- regulators that can regulate recombination hotspots is highly desired

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