PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Laurie S Stevison AU - August E Woerner AU - Jeffrey M Kidd AU - Joanna L Kelley AU - Krishna R Veeramah AU - Kimberly F. McManus AU - Great Ape Genome Project AU - Carlos D Bustamante AU - Michael F Hammer AU - Jeffrey D Wall TI - The Time-Scale of Recombination Rate Evolution in Great Apes AID - 10.1101/013755 DP - 2015 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 013755 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2015/01/13/013755.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2015/01/13/013755.full AB - We present three linkage-disequilibrium (LD)-based recombination maps generated using whole-genome sequencing data of 10 Nigerian chimpanzees, 13 bonobos, and 15 western gorillas, collected as part of the Great Ape Genome Project (Prado-Martinez et al. 2013). Using species-specific PRDM9 sequences to predict potential binding sites, we identified an important role for PRDM9 in predicting recombination rate variation broadly across great apes. Our results are contrary to previous research that PRDM9 is not associated with recombination in western chimpanzees (Auton et al. 2012). Additionally, we show that fewer hotspots are shared among chimpanzee subspecies than within human populations, further narrowing the time-scale of complete hotspot turnover. We quantified the variation in the biased distribution of recombination rates towards recombination hotspots across great apes. We found that correlations between broad-scale recombination rates decline more rapidly than nucleotide divergence between species. We also compared the skew of recombination rates at centromeres and telomeres between species and show a skew from chromosome means extending as far as 10-15 Mb from chromosome ends. Further, we examined broad-scale recombination rate changes near a translocation in gorillas and found minimal differences as compared to other great ape species perhaps because the coordinates relative to the chromosome ends were unaffected. Finally, based on multiple linear regression analysis, we found that various correlates of recombination rate persist throughout primates including repeats, diversity, divergence and local effective population size (Ne). Our study is the first to analyze within-and between-species genome-wide recombination rate variation in several close relatives.