Abstract

Meiotic recombination is a highly conserved process that has profound effects on genome evolution. At a fine-scale, recombination rates can vary drastically across genomes, often localized into small recombination “hotspots” with highly elevated rates, surrounded by regions with little recombination. In most species studied, the location of hotspots within genomes is highly conserved across broad evolutionary timescales. The main exception to this pattern is in mammals, where hotspot location can evolve rapidly among closely related species and even among populations within a species. Hotspot position in mammals is controlled by the gene, Prdm9, whereas in species with conserved hotspots, a functional Prdm9 is typically absent. Due to a limited number of species where recombination rates have been estimated at a fine-scale, it remains unclear whether hotspot conservation is always associated with the absence of a functional Prdm9. Threespine stickleback fish (Gasterosteus aculeatus) are an excellent model to examine the evolution of recombination over short evolutionary timescales. Using a linkage disequilibrium-based approach, we found recombination rates indeed varied at a fine-scale across the genome, with many regions organized into narrow hotspots. Hotspots had highly divergent landscapes between stickleback populations, where only ∼15% of these hotspots were shared. Our results indicate that fine-scale recombination rates may be diverging between closely related populations of threespine stickleback fish. Interestingly, we found only a weak association of a PRDM9 binding motif within hotspots, which suggests that threespine stickleback fish may possess a novel mechanism for targeting recombination hotspots at a fine-scale.

Highlights

  • Meiotic recombination is a highly-conserved process across a broad range of taxa

  • We examined whether the predicted binding sites of any of the 11 previously annotated PRDM genes in threespine stickleback fish were enriched in recombination hotspots

  • Recombination rates across the threespine stickleback genome were conserved between the two populations

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Summary

Introduction

Meiotic recombination is a highly-conserved process across a broad range of taxa (deMassy 2013; Petes 2001). Conserved hotspots are often localized around regions of open chromatin such as transcription start sites (TSSs) and CG-rich regions (i.e. CpG islands) in vertebrates (Auton et al 2013; Kawakami et al 2017; Lee et al 2004; Pan et al 2011; Pokholok et al 2005; Singhal et al 2015; Tischfield and Keeney 2012). This localization pattern is thought to be due the opportunistic nature of Spo, a meiosis specific protein which initiates recombination by creating double stranded breaks at regions of open chromatin (Celerin et al.2000; Ohta et al 1994; Pan et al 2011)

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