Physical and Genetic Mapping of the Human X Chromosome Centromere: Repression of Recombination

  1. Melanie M. Mahtani1,3 and
  2. Huntington F. Willard2,4
  1. 1Department of Genetics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305-5120 USA; 2Department of Genetics and Center for Human Genetics, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio 44106 USA

Abstract

Classical genetic studies in Drosophila and yeast have shown that chromosome centromeres have a cis-acting ability to repress meiotic exchange in adjacent DNA. To determine whether a similar phenomenon exists at human centromeres, we measured the rate of meiotic recombination across the centromere of the human X chromosome. We have constructed a long-range physical map of centromeric α-satellite DNA (DXZ1) by pulsed-field gel analysis, as well as detailed meiotic maps of the pericentromeric region of the X chromosome in the CEPH family panel. By comparing these two maps, we determined that, in the proximal region of the X chromosome, a genetic distance of 0.57 cM exists between markers that span the centromere and are separated by at least the average 3600 kb physical distance mapped across the DXZ1 array. Therefore, the rate of meiotic exchange across the X chromosome centromere is <1 cM/6300 kb (and perhaps as low as 1 cM/17,000 kb on the basis of other physical mapping data), at least eightfold lower than the average rate of female recombination on the X chromosome and one of the lowest rates of exchange yet observed in the human genome.

Footnotes

  • 3 Present address: Microcide Pharmaceuticals, Mountain View, California 94043 USA.

  • 4 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL hfw{at}po.CWRU.edu; FAX (216) 368-3030.

    • Received August 25, 1997.
    • Accepted January 5, 1998.
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