Somatic and germinal recombination of a direct repeat in arabidopsis

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Abstract

Homologous recombination between a pair of directly repeated transgenes was studied in Arabidopsis. The test construct included two different internal, non-overlapping deletion alleles of npt (neomycin phosphotransferase) flanking an active HPT (hygromycin phosphotransferase) gene. This construct was introduced into Arabidopsis by agrobacterium- mediated transformation with selection for resistance to hygromycin, and two independent single-insert lines were analyzed. Selection for active NPT by resistance to kanamycin gave both fully and partly (chimeric) recombinant seedlings. Rates for one transgenic line were estimated at <2 x 10-5 events per division for germinal and >10-6 events per division for somatic recombination, a much smaller difference than between meiotic and mitotic recombination in yeast. Southern analysis showed that recombinants could be formed by either crossing over or gene conversion. A surprisingly high fraction (at least 2/17) of the recombinants, however, appeared to result from the concerted action of two or more independent simple events. Some evolutionary implications are discussed.

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Assaad, F. F., & Signer, E. R. (1992). Somatic and germinal recombination of a direct repeat in arabidopsis. Genetics, 132(2), 553–566. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/132.2.553

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