In mammals, there is a complex and intriguing relationship between DNA
repair and gametogenesis. DNA repair mechanisms are involved not only in
the repair of different types of DNA damage in developing germline cells,
but also take part in the meiotic recombination process. Furthermore, the
DNA repair mechanisms should tolerate mutations occurring during
gametogenesis, to a limited extent. In the present review, several
gametogenic aspects of DNA mismatch repair, homologous recombination
repair and postreplication repair are discussed. In addition, the role of
DNA damage-induced cell cycle checkpoint control is considered briefly. It
appears that many genes encoding proteins that take part in DNA repair
mechanisms show enhanced or specialized expression during mammalian
gametogenesis, and several gene knockout mouse models show male or female
infertility. On the basis of such knowledge and models, future experiments
may provide more information about the precise relationship between DNA
repair, chromatin dynamics, and genomic stability versus instability
during gametogenesis