Recombination frequency is a measure of genetic linkage and is used in the creation of a genetic linkage map. Recombination frequency (
θ) is the frequency with which a single
chromosomal crossover will take place between two
genes during
meiosis. A
centimorgan (cM) is a unit that describes a recombination frequency of 1%. In this way we can measure the genetic distance between two loci, based upon their recombination frequency. This is a good estimate of the real distance. Double crossovers would turn into no recombination. In this case we cannot tell if crossovers took place. If the loci we're analysing are very close (less than 7 cM) a double crossover is very unlikely. When distances become higher, the likelihood of a double crossover increases. As the likelihood of a double crossover increases one could systematically underestimate the genetic distance between two loci, unless one used an appropriate mathematical model. Double linkage is more of a historical concern for plants. In animals, double crossover happens rarely. In humans, for example, one chromosome has two crossovers on average during meiosis. Furthermore, modern geneticists have enough genes that only nearby genes need to be linkage-analyzed, unlike the early days when only a few genes were known. During meiosis, chromosomes assort randomly into
gametes, such that the segregation of
alleles of one gene is independent of alleles of another gene. This is stated in
Mendel's Second Law and is known as
the law of independent assortment. The law of independent assortment always holds true for genes that are located on different chromosomes, but for genes that are on the same chromosome, it does not always hold true. As an example of independent assortment, consider the crossing of the pure-bred
homozygote parental strain with
genotype AABB with a different pure-bred strain with genotype
aabb. A and a and B and b represent the alleles of genes A and B. Crossing these homozygous parental strains will result in F1 generation offspring that are double
heterozygotes with genotype AaBb. The F1 offspring AaBb produces gametes that are
AB,
Ab,
aB, and
ab with equal frequencies (25%) because the alleles of gene A assort independently of the alleles for gene B during meiosis. Note that 2 of the 4 gametes (50%)—
Ab and
aB—were not present in the parental generation. These gametes represent
recombinant gametes. Recombinant gametes are those gametes that differ from both of the
haploid gametes that made up the original
diploid cell. In this example, the recombination frequency is 50% since 2 of the 4 gametes were recombinant gametes. The recombination frequency will be 50% when two genes are located on different
chromosomes or when they are widely separated on the same chromosome. This is a consequence of independent assortment. When two genes are close together on the same chromosome, they do not assort independently and are said to be linked. Whereas genes located on different chromosomes assort independently and have a recombination frequency of 50%, linked genes have a recombination frequency that is less than 50%. As an example of linkage, consider the classic experiment by
William Bateson and
Reginald Punnett. They were interested in trait inheritance in the sweet pea and were studying two genes—the gene for flower colour (
P, purple, and
p, red) and the gene affecting the shape of pollen grains (
L, long, and
l, round). They crossed the pure lines
PPLL and
ppll and then self-crossed the resulting
PpLl lines. According to
Mendelian genetics, the expected
phenotypes would occur in a 9:3:3:1 ratio of PL:Pl:pL:pl. To their surprise, they observed an increased frequency of PL and pl and a decreased frequency of Pl and pL (see table below). Their experiment revealed
linkage between the
P and
L alleles and the
p and
l alleles. The frequency of
P occurring together with
L and with
p occurring together with
l is greater than that of the recombinant
Pl and
pL. The recombination frequency is more difficult to compute in an F2 cross than a backcross,
Linkage of genetic sites within a gene In the early 1950s the prevailing view was that the genes in a
chromosome are discrete entities, indivisible by
genetic recombination and arranged like beads on a string. During 1955 to 1959, Benzer performed
genetic recombination experiments using
rII mutants of
bacteriophage T4. He found that, on the basis of recombination tests, the sites of
mutation could be mapped in a linear order. This result provided evidence for the key idea that the gene has a linear structure equivalent to a length of
DNA with many sites that can independently mutate. Edgar et al. performed mapping experiments with r mutants of bacteriophage T4 showing that recombination frequencies between rII mutants are not strictly additive. The recombination frequency from a cross of two rII mutants (a x d) is usually less than the sum of recombination frequencies for adjacent internal sub-intervals (a x b) + (b x c) + (c x d). Although not strictly additive, a systematic relationship was observed that likely reflects the underlying molecular mechanism of
genetic recombination. ==Variation of recombination frequency==