- RecLOH
RecLOH is a term in
genetics that is an abbreviation for "Recombination al Loss ofHeterozygosity ".This is a type of
mutation which occurs withDNA byrecombination . From a pair of equivalent ("homologous"), but slightly different genes, a pair of identical genes results. In this case there is an unreciprocal exchange of genetic code between the chromosomes, in contrast tochromosomal crossover , because genetic information is lost.For Y chromosome
In
genetic genealogy , the term is used particularly concerning similar seeming events inY chromosome DNA. This type of mutation happens within one chromosome, and does not involve a reciprocal transfer. Rather, one homologous segment "writes over" the other. The mechanism is presumed to be different from RecLOH events in autosomal chromosomes, since the target is the very same chromosome instead of the homologous one.During the mutation one of these copies overwrites the other. Thus the differences between the two are lost. Because differences are lost,
heterozygosity is lost.Recombination on the
Y chromosome does not only take place duringmeiosis , but virtually at everymitosis when the Y chromosome condenses, because it doesn't require pairing between chromosomes. Recombination frequency even exceeds the frame shift mutation frequency (slipped strand mispairing ) of (average fast)Y-STR s, however many recombination products may lead to infertile germ cells and "daughter out".Recombination events (RecLOH) can be observed if YSTR databases are searched for twin alleles at 3 or more duplicated markers on the same palindrome (hairpin).E.g. DYS459, DYS464 and DYS724 (CDY) are located on the same palindrome P1. A high proportion of 9-9, 15-15-17-17, 36-36 combinations and similar twin allelic patterns will be found. PCR typing technologies have been developed (e.g. DYS464X) that are able to verify that there are most frequently really two alleles of each, so we can be sure that there is no gene deletion. Family genealogies have proven many times, that parallel changes on all markers located on the same palindrome are frequently observed and the result of those changes are always twin alleles. So a 9-10, 15-16-17-17, 36-38 haplotype can change in one recombination event to the one mentioned above, because all three markers (DYS459, DYS464 and DYS724) are affected by one and the same recLOH event.
References
*cite web
last = Krahn
first = Thomas
year = 2005
url = http://www.dna-fingerprint.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=Sections&file=index&req=viewarticle&artid=9
title = Recombinational Loss of Heterozygosity (recLOH)
publisher = DNA-Fingerprint, Germany
accessdate = 2006-07-11ee also
*
Null allele
*Paternal mtDNA transmission
*List of genetic genealogy topics External links
* [http://www.dna-fingerprint.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=Sections&file=index&req=viewarticle&artid=9 RecLOH explained]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.