Chromosomal Crossover
Chromosomal Crossover
Chromosomal Crossover
Chromosomal crossover
Chromosomal crossover (or crossing over) is an exchange of genetic
material between homologous chromosomes. It is one of the final
phases of genetic recombination, which occurs during prophase I of
meiosis (diplotene) in a process called synapsis. Synapsis begins
before the synaptonemal complex develops, and is not completed until
near the end of prophase I. Crossover usually occurs when matching
regions on matching chromosomes break and then reconnect to the
other chromosome.
Chemistry
Meiotic recombination initiates with double-stranded breaks that are
A double crossing over
introduced into the DNA by the Spo11 protein.[2] One or more
exonucleases then digest the 5’ ends generated by the double-stranded
breaks to produce 3’ single-stranded DNA tails. The meiosis-specific
recombinase Dmc1 and the general recombinase Rad51 coat the
single-stranded DNA to form nucleoprotein filaments.[3] The
recombinases catalyze invasion of the opposite chromatid by the
single-stranded DNA from one end of the break. Next, the 3’ end of the
invading DNA primes DNA synthesis, causing displacement of the
complementary strand, which subsequently anneals to the
single-stranded DNA generated from the other end of the initial
Recombination involves the breakage and
double-stranded break. The structure that results is a cross-strand rejoining of parental chromosomes
exchange, also known as a Holliday junction. The contact between two
chromatids that will soon undergo crossing-over is known as a chiasma. The Holliday junction is a tetrahedral
structure which can be 'pulled' by other recombinases, moving it along the four-stranded structure.
Chromosomal crossover 2
Consequences
In most eukaryotes, a cell carries two copies of each gene, each
referred to as an allele. Each parent passes on one allele to each
offspring. An individual gamete inherits a complete haploid
complement of alleles on chromosomes that are independently
selected from each pair of chromatids lined up on the metaphase
plate. Without recombination, all alleles for those genes linked
together on the same chromosome would be inherited together.
Meiotic recombination allows a more independent selection
between the two alleles that occupy the positions of single genes,
as recombination shuffles the allele content between homologous
chromosomes.
Holliday Junction
Recombination does not have any influence on the statistical
probability that another offspring will have the same combination.
This theory of "independent assortment" of alleles is fundamental
to genetic inheritance. However, there is an exception that requires
further discussion.
Problems
Although crossovers typically occur between homologous regions of matching chromosomes, similarities in
sequence can result in mismatched alignments. These processes are called unbalanced recombination. Unbalanced
recombination is fairly rare compared to normal recombination, but severe problems can arise if a gamete containing
unbalanced recombinants becomes part of a zygote. The result can be a local duplication of genes on one
chromosome and a deletion of these on the other, a translocation of part of one chromosome onto a different one, or
an inversion.
References
[1] Creighton H, McClintock B (1931). "A Correlation of Cytological and Genetical Crossing-Over in Zea Mays" (http:/ / www. pubmedcentral.
nih. gov/ articlerender. fcgi?tool=pmcentrez& artid=1076098). Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 17 (8): 492–7. doi:10.1073/pnas.17.8.492.
PMID 16587654. PMC 1076098. (Original paper)
[2] Keeney, S; Giroux, CN; Kleckner, N (1997). "Meiosis-Specific DNA Double-Strand Breaks Are Catalyzed by Spo11, a Member of a Widely
Conserved Protein Family". Cell 88 (3): 375. doi:10.1016/S0092-8674(00)81876-0. PMID 9039264.
[3] Sauvageau, S; Stasiak, Az; Banville, I; Ploquin, M; Stasiak, A; Masson, Jy (Jun 2005). "Fission yeast rad51 and dmc1, two efficient DNA
recombinases forming helical nucleoprotein filaments." (http:/ / mcb. asm. org/ cgi/ pmidlookup?view=long& pmid=15899844) (Free full
text). Molecular and cellular biology 25 (11): 4377–87. doi:10.1128/MCB.25.11.4377-4387.2005. ISSN 0270-7306. PMID 15899844.
PMC 1140613. .
See also
• Coefficient of coincidence
• Genetic distance
• Independent assortment
• Mitotic crossover
• Recombinant frequency
Article Sources and Contributors 4
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