The study of homologous recombination has its historical roots in meiosis. In this context, recombination occurs as a programmed event that culminates in the formation of crossovers, which are essential for accurate chromosome segregation and create new combinations of parental alleles. Thus, meiotic recombination underlies both the independent assortment of parental chromosomes and genetic linkage. This review highlights the features of meiotic recombination that distinguish it from recombinational repair in somatic cells, and how the molecular processes of meiotic recombination are embedded and interdependent with the chromosome structures that characterize meiotic prophase. A more in-depth review presents our understanding of how crossover and noncrossover pathways of meiotic recombination are differentiated and regulated. The final section of this review summarizes the studies that have defined defective recombination as a leading cause of pregnancy loss and congenital disease in humans.
MEIOSIS AND THE ROOTS OF RECOMBINATION RESEARCHT he concept of recombination emerged during the early 20th century, following the post-Mendel era of heredity research. Thomas Hunt Morgan's formal theory of gene linkage and crossing-over (Morgan 1913) was a synthesis of three key concepts: "the chromosome theory of inheritance," imparted by Wilhelm Roux, Walther Flemming, Theodor Boveri, and Walter Sutton; "gene linkage," an exception to Mendel's law of independent assortment, first reported by Carl Correns; and the "chiasmatype theory," derived from Frans Janssens' cytological observations of meiotic chromosomes. The first proof of the crossover theory came from Harriet Creighton and Barbara McClintock (Creighton and McClintock 1931), who were able to correlate cytological and genetic exchanges in maize.Experiments aimed at understanding the mechanism of meiotic recombination became dominated by fungal genetics because of the huge advantage afforded by being able to recover all four meiotic products. These elegant studies culminated in four key concepts that formed the foundation of molecular models of recombination: gene conversion, an exception to Mendel's principle of segregation, signaled a local nonreciprocal transfer of genetic information (Winkler 1930;Lindergren 1953;Mitchell 1955); postmeiotic segregation (PMS) indicated the presence of heteroduplex DNA (Olive 1959;Kitani et al. 1962) (Lissouba and Rizet 1960;Murray 1960); and the strong correlation between gene conversion/ PMS events and crossing-over led to the proposal that these processes were mechanistically linked (Kitani et al. 1962;Perkins 1962;Whitehouse 1963).
MOLECULAR MODELS OF MEIOTIC RECOMBINATIONHolliday's classic model reconciled gene conversion, PMS, and crossing-over into a single mechanism with the key features of hybrid (heteroduplex) DNA formed via strand exchange, mismatch correction of hybrid DNA to yield gene conversion, and a four-way exchange junction that could be resolved to yield either crossover or noncrossover duplex products (Holliday...