Genes in Neurospora That Suppress Recombination When They Are Heterozygous |
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Authors: | D. E. A. Catcheside |
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Affiliation: | School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, Bedford Park, South Australia 5042 |
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Abstract: | Genes that suppress recombination when heterozygous have been found distributed as a polymorphism in wild and laboratory populations of Neurospora crassa. Three alleles, ssE, ssS and ssC, are associated, respectively, with the three wild types Emerson, St. Lawrence 74A and Costa Rica A. It is proposed that ss (synaptic sequence) genes modulate recombination by determining the pairing closeness of DNA duplexes in the vicinity of the nit-2 locus. When heterozygous, ss suppresses recombination 2- to 20-fold within the nit-2 locus, which it adjoins, but crossing over in intervals flanking nit-2 is not affected. The magnitude of suppression depends upon the ss alleles involved, and ss acts multiplicatively with rec-1; together, these genes modulate recombination within the nit-2 locus over a range exceeding 100-fold. The ss effect is not attributable to gross chromosomal rearrangement, but could be due to small inversions or insertions, such as transposable elements. |
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