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Variation in estimated recombination rates across human populations
Authors:Jan Graffelman  David J. Balding  Anna Gonzalez-Neira  Jaume Bertranpetit
Affiliation:(1) Department of Statistics and Operations Research, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Avinguda Diagonal 647, 08028 Barcelona, Spain;(2) Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Imperial College, St Mary’s Campus, Norfolk Place, London, W2 1PG, UK;(3) Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncológicas, Melchor Fernández Almagro, 3, 28029 Madrid, Spain;(4) Biologia Evolutiva, CEXS and CIBER en Epidemiología y Salud Pública (CIBERESP, Spain), Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Doctor Aiguader 88, 08003 Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Abstract:
Recently it has been reported that recombination hotspots appear to be highly variable between humans and chimpanzees, and there is evidence for between-person variability in hotspots, and evolutionary transience. To understand the nature of variation in human recombination rates, it is important to describe patterns of variability across populations. Direct measurement of recombination rates remains infeasible on a large scale, and population-genetic approaches can be imprecise, and are affected by demographic history. Reports to date have suggested broad similarity in recombination rates at large genomic scales and across human populations. Here, we examine recombination rate estimates at a finer population and genomic scale: 28 worldwide populations and 107 SNPs in a 1 Mb stretch of chromosome 22q. We employ analysis of variance of recombination rate estimates, corrected for differences in effective population size using genome-wide microsatellite mutation rate estimates. We find substantial variation in fine-scale rates between populations, but reduced variation within continental groups. All effects examined (SNP-pair, region, population and interactions) were highly significant. Adjustment for effective population size made little difference to the conclusions. Observed hotspots tended to be conserved across populations, albeit at varying intensities. This holds particularly for populations from the same region, and also to a considerable degree across geographical regions. However, some hotspots appear to be population-specific. Several results from studies on the population history of humans are in accordance with our analysis. Our results suggest that between-population variation in DNA sequences may underly recombination rate variation.
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