Anmelden

Other than maintaining genome stability via DNA repair, homologous recombination plays an important role in diversifying the genome. In fact, the recombination of sequences forms the molecular basis of genomic evolution. Random and non-random permutations of genomic sequences create a library of new amalgamated sequences. These newly formed genomes can determine the fitness and survival of cells. In bacteria, homologous and non-homologous types of recombination lead to the evolution of new genomes that ultimately decide the adaptability of bacteria to varying environmental conditions.

During meiosis, when a single cell divides twice to produce four cells containing half the original number of chromosomes, HR leads to crossovers between genes. This means that two regions of the same chromosome with nearly identical sequences break and then reconnect but to a different end piece. The minor differences between the DNA sequences of the homologous chromosomes do not change the function of the gene but can change the allele or the phenotype of the gene. For example, if a gene codes for a trait such as hair color, its allele determines the specific phenotype, i.e. whether the hair would be black, blonde or red. Humans contain two alleles of the same gene, at each gene location, one from each parent. Recombination such as gene conversion changes this distribution, altering the gene’s form or manifestation in the offspring.

Tags

Gene ConversionGenetic RecombinationGenomic StabilityDNA RepairAlleleHomologous RecombinationGenetic Variation

Aus Kapitel 8:

article

Now Playing

8.15 : Gene Conversion

DNA Replication and Repair

9.6K Ansichten

article

8.1 : Base-pairing and DNA Repair

DNA Replication and Repair

64.3K Ansichten

article

8.2 : The DNA Replication Fork

DNA Replication and Repair

13.6K Ansichten

article

8.3 : Lagging Strand Synthesis

DNA Replication and Repair

11.9K Ansichten

article

8.4 : The Replisome

DNA Replication and Repair

5.9K Ansichten

article

8.5 : Proofreading

DNA Replication and Repair

5.8K Ansichten

article

8.6 : Replication in Prokaryotes

DNA Replication and Repair

22.9K Ansichten

article

8.7 : Replication in Eukaryotes

DNA Replication and Repair

12.0K Ansichten

article

8.8 : Telomeres and Telomerase

DNA Replication and Repair

4.9K Ansichten

article

8.9 : Overview of DNA Repair

DNA Replication and Repair

7.3K Ansichten

article

8.10 : Base Excision Repair

DNA Replication and Repair

3.5K Ansichten

article

8.11 : Nucleotide Excision Repair

DNA Replication and Repair

3.4K Ansichten

article

8.12 : Mismatch Repair

DNA Replication and Repair

4.6K Ansichten

article

8.13 : Fixing Double-strand Breaks

DNA Replication and Repair

3.0K Ansichten

article

8.14 : Homologous Recombination

DNA Replication and Repair

4.3K Ansichten

See More

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten