Biased Gene Conversion and the Evolution of Mammalian Genomic Landscapes
Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 · Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Recombination is typically thought of as a symmetrical process resulting in large-scale reciprocal genetic exchanges between homologous chromosomes. Recombination events, however, are also accompanied by short-scale, unidirectional exchanges known as gene conversion in the neighborhood of the initiating double-strand break. A large body of evidence suggests that gene conversion is GC-biased in many eukaryotes, including mammals and human. AT/GC heterozygotes produce more GC- than AT-gametes, thus conferring a population advantage to GC-alleles in high-recombining regions. This apparently unimportant feature of our molecular machinery has major evolutionary consequences. Structurally, GC-biased gene conversion…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 54.76
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 151
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Gene conversion
- Biology
- Genetics
- Homologous recombination
- Gene
- Concerted evolution
- Genome
- Molecular evolution