Unusually High Recombination Rate Detected in the Sex Locus Region of the Honey Bee (Apis mellifera)

Author:

Beye Martin1,Hunt Greg J2,Page Robert E3,Fondrk M Kim3,Grohmann Lore4,Moritz R F A1

Affiliation:

1. Martin-Luther-Universitaät Halle/Wittenberg, Institut für Zoologie, MolekulareÖkologie, 06099 Halle, Germany

2. Department of Entomology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907-1158

3. Department of Entomology, University of California, Davis, California 95616

4. Institut fürÖkologie und Biologie, 10587 Berlin, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Sex determination in Hymenoptera is controlled by haplo-diploidy in which unfertilized eggs develop into fertile haploid males. A single sex determination locus with several complementary alleles was proposed for Hymenoptera [so-called complementary sex determination (CSD)]. Heterozygotes at the sex determination locus are normal, fertile females, whereas diploid zygotes that are homozygous develop into sterile males. This results in a strong heterozygote advantage, and the sex locus exhibits extreme polymorphism maintained by overdominant selection. We characterized the sex-determining region by genetic linkage and physical mapping analyses. Detailed linkage and physical mapping studies showed that the recombination rate is <44 kb/cM in the sex-determining region. Comparing genetic map distance along the linkage group III in three crosses revealed a large marker gap in the sex-determining region, suggesting that the recombination rate is high. We suggest that a “hotspot” for recombination has resulted here because of selection for combining favorable genotypes, and perhaps as a result of selection against deleterious mutations. The mapping data, based on long-range restriction mapping, suggest that the Q DNA-marker is within 20,000 bp of the sex locus, which should accelerate molecular analyses.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

Reference42 articles.

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2. Sex linkage in the honey bee Apis mellifera L. detected by multilocus DNA finger-printing;Beye;Naturwissenschaften,1994

3. Mapping the sex locus of the honeybee (Apis mellifera);Beye;Naturwissenschaften,1996

4. A simple, non-radioactive DNA fingerprinting method for identification patrilines of honeybee colonies;Beye;Apidologie,1998

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