21 research outputs found

    Csm4, in Collaboration with Ndj1, Mediates Telomere-Led Chromosome Dynamics and Recombination during Yeast Meiosis

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    Chromosome movements are a general feature of mid-prophase of meiosis. In budding yeast, meiotic chromosomes exhibit dynamic movements, led by nuclear envelope (NE)-associated telomeres, throughout the zygotene and pachytene stages. Zygotene motion underlies the global tendency for colocalization of NE-associated chromosome ends in a “bouquet.” In this study, we identify Csm4 as a new molecular participant in these processes and show that, unlike the two previously identified components, Ndj1 and Mps3, Csm4 is not required for meiosis-specific telomere/NE association. Instead, it acts to couple telomere/NE ensembles to a force generation mechanism. Mutants lacking Csm4 and/or Ndj1 display the following closely related phenotypes: (i) elevated crossover (CO) frequencies and decreased CO interference without abrogation of normal pathways; (ii) delayed progression of recombination, and recombination-coupled chromosome morphogenesis, with resulting delays in the MI division; and (iii) nondisjunction of homologs at the MI division for some reason other than absence of (the obligatory) CO(s). The recombination effects are discussed in the context of a model where the underlying defect is chromosome movement, the absence of which results in persistence of inappropriate chromosome relationships that, in turn, results in the observed mutant phenotypes

    Budding Yeast Pch2, a Widely Conserved Meiotic Protein, Is Involved in the Initiation of Meiotic Recombination

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    Budding yeast Pch2 protein is a widely conserved meiosis-specific protein whose role is implicated in the control of formation and displacement of meiotic crossover events. In contrast to previous studies where the function of Pch2 was implicated in the steps after meiotic double-strand breaks (DSBs) are formed, we present evidence that Pch2 is involved in meiotic DSB formation, the initiation step of meiotic recombination. The reduction of DSB formation caused by the pch2 mutation is most prominent in the sae2 mutant background, whereas the impact remains mild in the rad51 dmc1 double mutant background. The DSB reduction is further pronounced when pch2 is combined with a hypomorphic allele of SPO11. Interestingly, the level of DSB reduction is highly variable between chromosomes, with minimal impact on small chromosomes VI and III. We propose a model in which Pch2 ensures efficient formation of meiotic DSBs which is necessary for igniting the subsequent meiotic checkpoint responses that lead to proper differentiation of meiotic recombinants

    The pch2Δ Mutation in Baker's Yeast Alters Meiotic Crossover Levels and Confers a Defect in Crossover Interference

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    Pch2 is a widely conserved protein that is required in baker's yeast for the organization of meiotic chromosome axes into specific domains. We provide four lines of evidence suggesting that it regulates the formation and distribution of crossover events required to promote chromosome segregation at Meiosis I. First, pch2Δ mutants display wild-type crossover levels on a small (III) chromosome, but increased levels on larger (VII, VIII, XV) chromosomes. Second, pch2Δ mutants show defects in crossover interference. Third, crossovers observed in pch2Δ require both Msh4-Msh5 and Mms4-Mus81 functions. Lastly, the pch2Δ mutation decreases spore viability and disrupts crossover interference in spo11 hypomorph strains that have reduced levels of meiosis-induced double-strand breaks. Based on these and previous observations, we propose a model in which Pch2 functions at an early step in crossover control to ensure that every homolog pair receives an obligate crossover

    The Conserved Pch2 Gene Acts To Regulate Dna Doublestrand Break Repair In Saccharomyces Cerevisiae Meiosis

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    In the first chromosome division of meiosis (MI), homologous chromosome pairs are separated, allowing for the production of fertile haploid gametes from diploid progenitor cells. Proper MI segregation of homologous chromosomes in most eukaryotic organisms requires that at least one programmed DNA double-strand break (DSB) per pair of homologous chromosomes is repaired as a crossover. These crossover events tether homologous chromosomes together, which allows for the generation of a bipolar spindle to separate the homologous chromosomes. The widely conserved PCH2 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is involved in regulating the repair of meiotic DSBs. First, Pch2 promotes the use of the homologous chromosome, instead of the sister chromatid, as a DSB repair template. Second, Pch2 regulates the fate of DSBs that are repaired using the homologous chromosome by limiting gene conversion and by promoting crossover interference. pch2 mutants repair a greater proportion of meiotic DSBs using the sister chromatid than wild-type cells, but the majority of DSBs are still repaired using the homologous chromosome. The DSBs that are repaired using the homologous chromosome in pch2 mutants have a higher likelihood to be associated with gene conversion events and to be repaired as crossovers, as opposed to noncrossovers. The distribution of crossover events observed in pch2 also demonstrates a significant reduction in crossover interference in these mutants. I hypothesize that a single Pch2-dependent role in meiotic chromosome axis organization inhibits intersister DSB repair, limits gene conversion tract length, and promotes the interference regulation of interhomolog DSB repair

    What can we learn from selfish loci that break Mendel’s law?

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    Exceptions to Mendel’s law of segregation were important for demonstrating that chromosomes carry genetic material. Scrutiny of additional exceptions to Mendel’s law caused by selfish genes has the potential to unravel other unsolved mysteries of genetics. Exceptions to Mendel’s law of segregation were important for demonstrating that chromosomes carry genetic material. Scrutiny of other exceptional inheritance patterns has the potential to unravel unsolved mysteries of genetics

    What can we learn from selfish loci that break Mendel's law?

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    Exceptions to Mendel's law of segregation were important for demonstrating that chromosomes carry genetic material. Scrutiny of additional exceptions to Mendel's law caused by selfish genes has the potential to unravel other unsolved mysteries of genetics

    R2d2 and Hyperdrive Mechanisms (in Mouse Meiosis).

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    Mutation Hot Spots in Yeast Caused by Long-Range Clustering of Homopolymeric Sequences

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    Evolutionary theory assumes that mutations occur randomly in the genome; however, studies performed in a variety of organisms indicate the existence of context-dependent mutation biases. Sources of mutagenesis variation across large genomic contexts (e.g., hundreds of bases) have not been identified. Here, we use high-coverage whole-genome sequencing of a conditional mismatch repair mutant line of diploid yeast to identify mutations that accumulated after 160 generations of growth. The vast majority of the mutations accumulated as insertion/deletions (in/dels) in homopolymeric [poly(dA:dT)] and repetitive DNA tracts. Surprisingly, the likelihood of an in/del mutation in a given poly(dA:dT) tract is increased by the presence of nearby poly(dA:dT) tracts in up to a 1,000 bp region centered on the given tract. Our work suggests that specific mutation hot spots can contribute disproportionately to the genetic variation that is introduced into populations and provides long-range genomic sequence context that contributes to mutagenesis
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