Effects of recombination on hitchhiking diversity in the brassica self-incompatibility locus complex

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Abstract

In self-incompatibility, a number of S haplotypes are maintained by frequency-dependent selection, which results in trans-specific S haplotypes. The region of several kilobases (∼40-60 kb) from SP6 to SP2, including self-incompatibility-related genes and some adjacent genes in Brassica rapa, has high nucleotide diversity due to the hitchhiking effect, and therefore we call this region the "S-locus complex." Recombination in the S-locus complex is considered to be suppressed. We sequenced regions of >50 kb of the S-locus complex of three S haplotypes in B. rapa and found higher nucleotide diversity in intergenic regions than in coding regions. Two highly similar regions of >10 kb were found between BrS-8 and BrS-46. Phylogenetic analysis using trans-specific S haplotypes (called interspecific pairs) of B. rapa and B. oleracea suggested that recombination reduced the nucleotide diversity in these two regions and that the genes not involved in self-incompatibility in the S-locus complex and the kinase domain, but not the S domain, of SRK have also experienced recombination. Recombination may reduce hitchhiking diversity in the S-locus complex, whereas the region from the S domain to SP11 would disfavor recombination. Copyright © 2007 by the Genetics Society of America.

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Takuno, S., Fujimoto, R., Sugimura, T., Sato, K., Okamoto, S., Zhang, S. L., & Nishio, T. (2007). Effects of recombination on hitchhiking diversity in the brassica self-incompatibility locus complex. Genetics, 177(2), 949–958. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.107.073825

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