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a yeast mutation that blocks double-strand-break
processing and permits nonhomologous synapsis in meiosis
Institut für Botanik, Abteilung für Zytologie und Genetik, 1030 Vienna, Austria
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Abstract |
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During meiotic prophase the repair of self-inflicted DNA
double-strand break (DSB) damage leads to meiotic recombination in yeast. We employed a genetic screen to specifically characterize cellular functions that become essential after this DSB formation. As a
result a new allele of MRE11, termed mre11S (for
Separation of functions) was isolated that allows
initiation but not processing and repair of meiotic DSBs similar to the
well-characterized rad50S allele. In contrast, the
mre11-1 allele blocks initiation of meiotic DSBs as reported
previously by others. The mre11S allele, which is mutated in
the 5
part of the gene, can partially complement mre11
alleles disrupted close to the 3
end that cannot initiate DSBs
when homozygous. This suggests homodimerization of the Mre11 protein
and the presence of separate domains for DSB initiation and 5
resection. The fact that two genes, RAD50 and MRE11,
required for DSB processing are also essential for DSB initiation
dictates a model in which a bifunctional
initiation/repair complex is required to initiate meiotic
recombination. A subset of mre11S nuclei was shown to perform
extensive but partially nonhomologous synapsis. We propose that the
unprocessed DSBs present in mre11S allow for synapsis, but that
homologous synapsis is only ensured at a later stage of recombination.
[Key Words: Meiosis; synaptonemal complex; MRE11; recombination; DNA double-strand breaks; Saccharomyces cerevisiae]
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Introduction |
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All sexually reproducing organisms rely on a specialized cell
division called meiosis to ultimately produce gametes for
conjugation. During this unique process a single
round of DNA replication is followed by two rounds of chromosome
segregation, reducing the nuclear content by half. As a result of an
elaborate homology search, sorting, and recombination processes,
physical connections between homologs are formed. In yeast at least
some of the chromosome sorting precedes the initiation of recombination
by DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) because pairing of homologous DNA
can be observed before DSBs appear and in mutants unable to induce DSBs
(Scherthan et al. 1992
; Loidl et al. 1994
; Weiner and Kleckner 1994
).
Similarly, hot spots for recombination interact before DSBs are formed,
because the degree of their homology was shown to influence the degree of DSB formation (Rocco and Nicolas 1996
; Xu and Kleckner 1995
). DSB
initiation requires the gene products of at least 10 genes, namely
SPO11, MRE11, RAD50, XRS2, MER2, MRE2, MEK1/MRE4,
MEI4, REC104, and REC114 and, most likely, REC102
(Alani et al. 1990
; Cao et al. 1990
; Bhargava et al. 1992
; Ivanov et
al. 1992
; Menees et al. 1992
; Johzuka and Ogawa 1995
; Ogawa et al.
1995
; Rockmill et al. 1995a
; Bullard et al. 1996
; S. Keeney; N. Leem,
N. Satoh, and H. Ogawa, both unpubl.). Recently, evidence has been
presented that Spo11p catalyzes DSB formation (Keeney et al. 1997
;
Bergerat et al. 1997
), but the role of the other genes is less clear.
To characterize essential processes in the wake of DSB initiation we
performed a mutant hunt for DSB-dependent meiotic lethals. The desired
mutants are unable to complete meiosis successfully in a wild-type
strain background where meiotic DSBs are initiated. Any meiotic mutant
defective in DSB initiation can be rescued by an additional
spo13 mutation because such strains undergo only a single
mitosis-like meiotic division. spo13 alone, however, cannot
rescue a DSB-dependent lethal because the DSBs initiate the defective
recombination pathway. In contrast, a spo13 rad50 double
mutation blocks both recombination and reductional division and thus
restores spore viability to the desired mutants (Malone and Esposito
1981
). As a result of this mutant screen the isolation of a new allele
of mre11 that unexpectedly caused this phenotype is presented
below.
mre11 was originally described as a mutation interfering with
meiotic recombination (Ajimura et al. 1993
). mre11 mutants
produce dead spores because of a lack of meiotic recombination, but an additional spo13 mutation restores spore viability. A hint
that MRE11 also has a role after DSB initiation came from the
fact that a temperature-sensitive mutant entering meiosis at permissive temperature was unable to repair some of the breaks when shifted to
restrictive temperature (Ogawa et al. 1995
). Johzuka and Ogawa (1995)
have cloned MRE11 and have shown that a disruption mutant (mre11::hisG) cannot initiate meiotic DSBs. Consistent with
its essential meiotic function MRE11 transcription is highly
up-regulated during meiosis as expected for a recombination enzyme.
During vegetative growth MRE11 is not essential but required
for full radio resistance and control of mitotic recombination levels, indicating that Mre11p is required for DNA repair. The same functions are dependent on RAD50 and XRS2.
Mre11p was shown to interact with itself physically, as well as with
Rad50p (Johzuka and Ogawa 1995
) by virtue of the two-hybrid system,
suggesting that it may act as a heteromultimere in vivo. Recently,
Moore and Haber (1996)
and Tsukamoto et al. (1996)
showed that Mre11p,
Rad50p, and Xrs2p play major roles in nonhomologous end joining in
mitotic cells. When repair of a HO-induced DSB was studied in a
situation where homologous recombination was precluded, mutants in
mre11, rad50, or xrs2 decreased the yield of
nonhomologous end joining, whereas most other members of the rad52 epistasis group did not affect the process (Moore and
Haber 1996
).
Homologs of MRE11 have been identified in various organisms.
The human homolog of Mre11p was identified by Petrini et al. (1995)
and
was shown by coimmunopreciptitation to interact with the human homolog
of Rad50p (Dolganov et al. 1996
). Homologs to MRE11 have also
been found in Caenorhabditis elegans, in Mus
musculus, and in Schizosaccharomyces pombe, where it is
called RAD32 (Tavassoli et al. 1995
). rad32 mutants
show defects analogous to mre11 mutants, namely impaired
mitotic DSB repair activity, as well as decreased meiotic recombination
and spore viability. Interestingly, a prokaryotic homolog of
MRE11, called sbcD was identified from
Escherichia coli by sequence comparison (Gibson et al. 1992
;
Sharples and Leach 1995
). SbcC and SbcD proteins were shown to interact
physically and to have double-strand exonuclease and single-strand
endonuclease activity in vitro (Connelly and Leach 1996
). Both
reactions are dependent on chelatable divalent kations like
Mn2+, but only the exonuclease activity relies on ATP
while endonucleolytic DNA degradation is ATP independent and can be
performed by SbcD alone (J.C. Connolly and D.R.F. Leach, unpubl.).
Therefore, SbcD might be the catalytic subunit of the SbcCD complex,
which is modulated by SbcC in the presence of ATP. SbcC is homologous
to RAD50, both being members of the Smc protein family, which
is involved in ATP-dependent chromosome condensation (Sharples and Leach 1995
). The homology of the prokaryotic SbcC/SbcD
pair with their eukaryotic counterparts Rad50/Mre11
suggests a nuclease function for the latter complex.
Data presented below show that Mre11p, in conjunction with Rad50p, is
required for the 5
resection of meiotic DSBs by a
5
3
exonucleolytic activity or a single-strand
endonucleolytic activity suggesting that Mre11/Rad50
presumably catalyzes this reaction.
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Results |
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A genetic screen to identify new functions required after initiation of recombination
A screen for mutants in new genes and functions required after initiation of meiotic DNA DSBs was carried out. Such mutants are expected to derail meiosis because meiotic DSBs entail a series of events that require specific functions for their completion. For instance, failure to repair recombination intermediates may lead to mis-segregation in both meiotic divisions and/or may possibly cause cell cycle arrest by activating a checkpoint. However, the desired mutation is expected to be rescued by the inactivation of both the RAD50 and the SPO13 gene. Inactivation of the RAD50 gene prevents DSB formation and initiation of meiotic recombination. Therefore chiasmata do not form, which results in subsequent failure of the reductional division. The need for physical connections can be alleviated by an additional spo13 mutation that causes the cells to skip the first meiotic division. The resulting dyads contain diploid spores with viability similar to those from a RAD50 spo13 meiosis (Table 1). Because all potentially lethal DSB-induced events are bypassed in a rad50 spo13 strain, a function of the defined specificity is dispensable.
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Figure 1 summarizes the mutant screen. The
homothallic strain Y136 is rad50, ade2, and spo13 but
carries SPO13 on centromere (CEN)-plasmid pTW15 and
RAD50 linked to ADE2 on CEN-plasmid p3. Single
spores from Y136 were mutagenized with
N-methyl-N-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG)
and plated on synthetic complete medium lacking adenine (SC-ADE). For
mutagenesis, MNNG was preferred over ethylmethane sulfonate (EMS)
because mutations are "fixed" immediately (Klein et al. 1990
).
Shortly after germination HO-induced mating-type switching
leads to diploidization, rendering all mutations homozygous and thereby
eliminating mutants defective in mating-type switching (such as
rad52). During subsequent proliferation on SC-ADE only plasmid p3 was selected for resulting in loss of plasmid pTW15. After 2 days colonies were transferred to sporulation medium (SPM+; see
Materials and Methods), where cells grew for several generations without selective pressure for any two plasmids before they sporulated.
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For wild-type cells, the presence of the two plasmids does not interfere with spore viability. Colonies derived from spores of such cells are white, owing to the relative stability of the CEN-vectors and the slow growth of ade2 rad50 cells. In a mutant of the required specificity, however, only cells that lack both plasmids are able to complete meiosis successfully, giving rise to red colonies. After 2 days on SPM+, colonies were replica plated to rich medium and were exposed to ether to kill unsporulated cells that would otherwise cause a white background. Predominantly red colonies were scored as potential mutants.
One mutant candidate was chosen for further investigation because it
displayed a strong phenotype and cytological examination suggested that
synapsis of axial elements was reduced. We cloned the affected gene by
complementation of the spore lethality phenotype (see Materials and
Methods), identifying MRE11 as the responsible element.
Because MRE11 had been described as being required for DSB
initiation (Ajimura et al. 1993
; Johzuka and Ogawa 1995
; Ogawa et al.
1995
) we were surprised to find that MRE11 also functions downstream of RAD50. The mre11 null mutant does not
initiate meiotic recombination as a rad50 null mutant does and
therefore is predicted to ultimately form white colonies in our assay.
The allele described here leads to a lethal event in spo13
cells that initiates meiotic recombination. Because this indicates that
the newly identified mre11 allele is partially functional and
because of the similarity of the phenotypes caused by this allele and
by rad50S (Alani et al. 1990
) it is referred to as
mre11S.
Isolation of mre11S, a new non-null allele of MRE11
We cloned the mre11S allele by gap repair and sequenced
it. The sequence of the open reading frame (ORF) recovered from the mutant differed from the sequence of the complementing plasmid at
positions +250 and +563 (both C
T transitions), which
predicts a proline-to-serine change at position 84 and a
threonine-to-isoleucine change at postion 188 of the protein (Fig.
2).
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Several other differences to the reported sequence (Johzuka and
Ogawa 1995
) were found in both the complementing wild-type clone and
the mutated allele, including a frameshift rendering the predicted
protein 49 amino acids longer (to equal 692 amino acids). This
carboxy-terminal tail is especially rich in arginine and lysine, as
well as serine and threonine, and has a potential nuclear localization
site. Two potential coiled-coil domains that span positions 326-351
and, with less likelihood, 506-526 were detected (see Materials and
Methods). As mentioned previously by Sharples and Leach (1995)
the
amino terminus exhibits homology to the bacterial SbcD recombination
enzyme. The region between Pro-63 and Pro-117 contains several amino
acids, including Pro-84, which are conserved throughout the eukaryotic
homologs known to date. However, it is devoid of any detectable
homology to SbcD while being surrounded by modules well conserved from
bacteria to human. The change from Thr to Ile at position 188, which is the second mutation contributing to the mre11S phenotype, is
also located in a conserved eukaryotic domain.
To confirm the epistatic relationship between rad50 and the newly isolated allele of mre11 suggested by the result of the screen we investigated spore viability in various spo13 strains by dissection of dyads (Table 1). The results clearly verified that rad50 is epistatic to mre11S with respect to the spore viability phenotype.
Genetic evidence for homodimerization of Mre11p
We have generated a set of mre11 alleles of various
lengths by transposon mutagenesis in E. coli using the
bacterial Tn3 (Seifert et al. 1986
). The positions of these
insertions were mapped by restriction analysis, and disruptions at
different sites within the MRE11-ORF were selected for
complementation studies (Fig. 3A). Strains with
different combinations of mre11 alleles were constructed by
crossing one mre11S strain to various partners harboring
MRE11, mre11S, or different mre11 transposon
disruption alleles. The resulting diploids (wild type for all other
sporulation genes) were sporulated for 2 days on solid medium at
30°C and tested for formation of viable spores either by patch assay
(Fig. 3B) or by tetrad dissection (Table 2).
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Comparison between mre11S/mre11S and
MRE11/mre11S confirmed that mre11S is
recessive regarding spore formation and spore viability. Alleles
disrupted in the 5
part of the MRE11 gene
(mre11-T20 through mre11-T34) could not complement
mre11S. Such heterozygotes behave similar to a mre11S
homozygote by showing greatly reduced sporulation. When the rare
tetrads produced by these heterozygotes were dissected they exhibited
higher spore viability than the mre11S homozygote, but because
of the low sporulation efficiency the meiotic yield (number of tetrads
produced times viable spores) remained low (~1%). All homozygous
mre11-T20, mre11-T4, and mre11-T10 disruption
strains sporulated well, but spores were inviable.
In contrast, disruptions at the 3
end (mre11-T4,
mre11-T10) lacking different parts of the evolutionary
less-conserved carboxyl terminus complemented
mre11S to almost wild-type levels of both sporulation
and spore viability (when sporulated on solid medium). Transposons
T4 and T10 generate in-frame mre11-lacZ
fusions (Materials and Methods). mre11-T40 and
mre11-T16, which map to the same positions and are equally
oriented as mre11-T4 and mre11-T10, respectively, but are out-of-frame, complemented also (Fig. 3). None of the disrupted
mre11 alleles produced a significant number of viable spores
when homozygous (Table 2). Thus, there is intragenic complementation between mre11S and the 3
disruptions.
Two-hybrid studies by Johzuka and Ogawa (1995)
have already shown that
Mre11p can interact with itself. Our results are compatible with this
finding and suggest that there is homodimerization while the proteins
are active. Homozygous mre11S strains or strains heterozygous
for mre11S and 5
mre11 disruptions show strongly reduced tetrad formation, which is similar to the situation in rad50S, a partially functional allele of RAD50 that
blocks meiotic DSB processing and repair (Alani et al. 1990
). When the
two point mutations of mre11S were tested separately by
dissection, each conferred a strong sporulation and spore viability
defect (data not shown).
If the different combinations of mre11 alleles behaved
differently in DSB formation, this could result in different levels of
induction of meiotic gene conversion. For meiotic mutants induction of
meiotic gene conversion can be determined by a return-to-growth experiment (Sherman and Roman 1963
), where cells re-enter the mitotic
pathway after meiotic induction, but before meiotic chromosome segregation. For some meiotic mutants (e.g., dmc1, zip1),
recombination intermediates that would cause a block or even lethal
damage to the cells on meiotic medium can be repaired mitotically
during return to growth (Bishop et al. 1992
; Sym et al. 1993
).
We determined meiotic gene conversion between heteroalleles at the
artificial his4-LEU2 and the natural ARG4
recombination hot spots (Cao et al. 1990
; Storlazzi et al. 1995
) during
return to growth. Homozygous mre11-T4 and mre11-T20
strains are unable to induce meiotic recombination, whereas mitotic
recombination is increased compared with wild type (Fig.
4A,B). Mitotic hyper-recombination has been observed
previously in mre11, rad50, and xrs2 null mutants (Malone and Esposito 1981
; Ivanov et al. 1992
; Ajimura et al. 1993
). A
rad50S strain is committed to about the same low level of
meiotic gene conversion, but the mitotic rate remains almost unchanged
compared to wild type. This results in a 5- to 10-fold meiotic
induction of gene conversion in rad50S, a phenomenon also seen
by Prinz et al. (1997)
. In the homozygote mre11S, gene
conversion is induced considerably stronger than in rad50S (up
to 10-fold, Fig. 4C,D). At the ARG4 site almost wild-type
levels of gene conversion could be observed in the
mre11S/mre11-T4 heterozygote thus supporting the notion of intragenic complementation between mre11S and
3
disruptions. No intragenic complementation was seen at the
artificial his4-LEU2 hot spot under these conditions in two
experiments (see Materials and Methods). However, when the
mre11S/mre11-T4 heterozygote was sporulated on
solid medium, viability was high (71%) and genetic distance between
URA3 inserted at his4-LEU2 and MAT was
reduced only moderately compared with wild type (Table
3). So this strain clearly is proficient for
reciprocal recombination at his4-LEU2 under proper
sporulation conditions. (A homozygous mre11S strain could not
be tested because of low spore viability).
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Because a mre11 null mutant had been shown to be repair
deficient (Ajimura et al. 1993
) we tested the resistance to
methylmethane sulfonate (MMS), a DNA-damaging agent that ultimately
causes DNA DSBs, of various mre11 mutants. Although the
MRE11/mre11S heterozygote behaves like the
isogenic wild type, the homozygous mre11S strain is partially
MMS sensitive (Fig. 5). However, compared to the mre11 disruptions (even when disrupted at the very 3
end
as in mre11-T4), it is remarkably resistant. This is
reminiscent of the situation in a rad50S mutant, where repair
during vegetative growth is much less affected than meiosis (Alani et
al. 1990
). When the two point mutations in mre11S were tested
separately, each exhibited MMS sensitivity between wild type and
mre11S (data not shown). As for spore viability, intragenic
complementation was also observed for MMS resistance, because the
3
disrupted mre11-T4 allele improved viability when
heterozygous with mre11S. Comparing MMS tolerance of
mre11-T4/mre11-T4 and the 5
disrupted mre11-T20/mre11-T20 suggests that
mre11-T4 retains some DNA repair activity, which is in good
agreement with its ability to partially complement the mre11S
allele. MMS sensitivity and mitotic hyper-recombination (seen at the
t = 0 point in Fig. 4) seem to correlate, as the homozygous disruptions with the highest MMS sensitivity also exhibit the highest mitotic level of gene convertants. The same mutants behave
like rad50
concerning sporulation (see above).
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mre11S strains accumulate unresected DSBs
The molecular interaction of Rad50p and Mre11p (Dolganov et al.
1996
; Johzuka and Ogawa 1995
), together with the similarity of
rad50S and mre11S sporulation phenotype, suggested
that mre11S mutants might not be able to process meiotic DSBs
(Alani et al. 1990
). Meiotic DSBs were assayed at three different
sites, the artificial his4-LEU2 hot spot (Cao et al. 1990
;
Storlazzi et al. 1995
)(Fig. 6A-D,F-H) as well as at the natural
THR4 and DED81 hot spots (de Massy and Nicolas 1993
;
Goldway et al. 1993
) (Fig. 6E). The results show
clearly that mre11S mutants are defective in DSB processing at
all sites (Fig. 6A,D,E). No difference concerning the location of the
breakage sites was found for rad50S and mre11S (Fig.
6C,D). mre11S is also recessive to MRE11 concerning
the DSB kinetics because one functional allele can restore DSB
processing, resulting in a faint, fuzzy band at the 4- and 5.5-hr time
points that disappears due to repair (Fig. 6B). No DSBs could be
detected in mre11-T4 or mre11-T20 homozygotes at
his4-LEU2, as expected. Thus, although both of these genes
seem not to be functional on their own, only mre11-T20 is a
null mutant because the truncated mre11-T4 still is able to
improve viability and recombination when heterozygous with
mre11S. However, no difference was observed between
mre11S/mre11-T4 and
mre11S/mre11S concerning accumulation of DSBs at
the his4-LEU2 hotspot (Fig. 6A,D,H), which is consistent with
the absence of an effect of mre11-T4 on induction of meiotic gene conversion at this locus. We attribute the apparent contradiction that mre11-T4 can partially complement mre11S when
testing for sporulation or MMS sensitivity (solid media), but not when
testing for commitment to meiotic recombination and DSB repair at
his4-LEU2 (liquid media) to the different conditions used.
Also complementation of the spore formation defect only worked when
cells were sporulated on plates but not in liquid SPM (data not shown).
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Intensities of parental and DSB-induced signals were determined for each lane using a PhosphorImager. The ratio of DSB versus parental band was used as the parameter to indicate DSB levels. Such quantification revealed that at both loci examined more broken DNA molecules are present at later time points in rad50S(KI81) than in mre11S mutants, the relative difference depending on the locus (Fig. 6A,E).
Unlike in rad50S the mre11S DSB signals decrease at the 8.5- and 9-hr time points. If this decrease is attributable to residual single-strand degradation in mre11S strains (but to a lesser extent in rad50S) and the broken molecules are finally converted to recombination products, this may explain why mre11S is more inducible for gene conversion than rad50S in return-to-growth experiments.
DSBs also accumulate at another hot spot for
recombination
THR4
both in mre11S and
rad50S single mutants, as well as in a rad50S mre11S
double mutant (Fig. 6E). In addition, a com1 mre11S mutant was
tested (data not shown) and found to yield the same breakage pattern at
THR4 as mre11S and com1/sae2
(McKee and Kleckner 1997
; Prinz et al. 1997
) alone.
mre11S mutants are defective in forming homologous synaptonemal complexes
Mutants that can be rescued by spo13 are unable to
synapse their axial elements (AEs) (Alani et al. 1990
; Engebrecht et
al. 1991
; Bhargava et al. 1992
; Menees et al. 1992
; Loidl et al. 1994
; Johzuka and Ogawa 1995
), whereas mutants that require an additional spo11 mutation to produce viable spores were shown to have
reduced synaptonemal complex (SC) formation (Alani et al. 1990
; Bishop et al. 1992
; Loidl et al. 1994
; Rockmill et al. 1995b
; Prinz et al.
1997
). In such mutants AEs much longer than those in wild type have
also been observed. In this study a considerable fraction of nuclei
showed extensive, although not wild type-like, synapsis.
To relate DSB formation with a cytological phenotype, synapsis and DSBs
were examined in the very same experiment for the MRE11/mre11S, the heterozygous
mre11S/mre11-T4, and the homozygous mre11-T4 and mre11S strains. Nuclei of wild-type and
mutant cells were classified as belonging to five categories by their
content of SC-related structures visualized in the transmission
electron microscope (TEM) (Figs. 7A-I and
8A-E). One hundred eighty-one to
two hundred seventy-five nuclei were counted per time point per strain.
The kinetics of SC formation and degradation in the MRE11/mre11S heterozygote was as reported for a
published wild type, and the kinetics of the mre11-T4 strain
was similar to rad50
(Padmore et al. 1991
).
mre11S/mre11-T4 behaved like
mre11S/mre11S with respect to SC formation,
further indicating that intragenic complementation is not very
pronounced during sporulation in liquid medium.
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Short AEs comprise the first class of nuclei observed in wild type and
mutants. However, they can differ, as very thick short AEs were found
in nuclei of all mre11 mutants but not of wild type. Wild-type
nuclei of this class contain typically very faint AEs. Also, the total
number of nuclei with short AEs is lower and decreases faster in wild
type than in the mutants, indicating that the turnover of these
precursors to the next stage is blocked or delayed in the mutants (Fig.
8A-D). The mre11S/mre11S and
mre11S/mre11-T4 strains exhibit a second
category of unsynapsed AEs (class 3) that are elongated and thickened
(Figs. 7D and 8B-D). They also have been described for
rad50S/rad50S strains (Alani et al. 1990
). This
class may either exist as a direct consequence of the cell cycle delay
in mre11S cells or, alternatively, represent AEs that were
unstably synapsed in vivo, thus belonging to class 2 or 4 (see below),
but had been disrupted by the spreading forces. Figure 7C shows an
example of a nucleus with both unsynapsed AEs and synapsed stretches
(class 2). This class is represented well in mre11S/mre11S and
mre11S/mre11-T4 strains, albeit slightly
delayed relative to wild type (Fig. 8A,C,D). This also is interpreted as a consequence of a delay in the progression of one transition state
(class 2) to the next (class 4). Class 2 nuclei are very rarely found
for mre11-T4/mre11-T4, suggesting a role of
DSBs for synapsis (see below). Because synapsing and degrading SCs are
sometimes morphologically indistinguishable, we propose that class 2 nuclei contain mainly synapsing SCs before class 4 peaks and mainly
degrading SCs after that.
Class 4 nuclei show extensive SC formation but no unsynapsed AEs (Fig.
7E,G-I). However, whereas in wild type there are usually a number of
10-16 discrete complexes corresponding to the paired chromosomes, the
mutants give a more variable picture. Figure 7E depicts a
mre11S/mre11S nucleus with extensive SC loops,
but SCs are not separated from each other. Figure 7I shows a different mre11S/mre11S nucleus, where a network of SCs
connected via AEs that perform partner switches can be observed. This
situation is similar to that decribed earlier for haploids undergoing
meiosis (Loidl et al. 1991
) indicating that synapsed AEs connect, at
least in part, nonhomologous chromosomes. A very rare example of a
mre11-T4/mre11-T4 nucleus with extensive
synapsis, showing far more than 16 synapsed entities is shown in Figure
7G. We also observed very small fractions of nuclei forming elongated
AEs and showing extensive synapsis (Fig. 8E). We suspect that rare
examples of SC formation arise from nuclei initiating some DSBs that
are below the limit of detection in our Southern blot (Fig. 6G) and in
return to growth (Fig. 4A). In general, most of the mre11-T4
nuclei were only able to form short AEs (Fig. 7B), as expected from a
mutant unable to initiate DSBs.
The parallel monitoring of DSB levels and synapsis allows the correlation of these two meiotic landmarks. For the wild type, DSBs reached their maximum level at 4 hr. At the same time, first synapsis, but no complete SC, was observed. In the mre11S mutants the first major increase in DSBs is at 5.5 hr, which is shortly before or at the time when the first synapsis can be demonstrated.
Both homologous pairing and SC formation are reduced in mre11S
The presence of partner switches in mre11 mutants
demonstrated by electron microscopy of silver-stained spreads indicated the occurrence of nonhomologous synapsis. We have combined fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and immunocytology in an effort to study
synapsis and homologous pairing
to compare the reduction of SC
formation in the mutant with the quantity of homologous DNA pairing.
The total amount of SCs in the mutant allows predictions about the
minimum level of DNA pairing if synapsis were homologous. If SC
formation exceeds DNA pairing, at least some of the SCs must connect
nonhomologous chromosomes.
The approach of combining FISH and immunocytology is complicated by two
facts: First, it is at present inapplicable to monitor synapsis by
immunocytology and pairing by FISH in the same cell because of the
different conditions required. Second, not all paired DNA sequences
need to be in the context of a SC because pairing precedes SC formation
(Scherthan et al. 1992
; Weiner and Kleckner 1994
). Below, we present
statistical evidence that a deficit of homologous pairing relative to
the amount of SCs was found, confirming that at least a fraction of the
SCs observed by electron microscopy were nonhomologous.
Pairing was monitored in a MRE11/mre11S and a
mre11S/mre11S strain at stages corresponding to
maximum SC formation, that is, at 5 hr in wild type and at 7 hr in the
mutant (see Fig. 8E). Of each same preparation one slide was used for
immunostaining with anti-Zip1 antibodies to decorate the SC (Sym et al.
1993
) and one was hybridized with a mixture of two differently labeled cosmid probes originating from a small and a large chromosome (chromosomes I and IV) (Fig. 9).
|
Distances between the homologous signal pairs as well as between
nonhomologous signals were determined. DNA sequences connected by a
homologous SC are believed to be within 0.7 µm (Weiner and Kleckner
1994
), and such signals will be referred to as being closely paired.
Table 4 lists the percentage of closely paired signals for wild-type
and mutant. Each single signal was closely paired in
only ~15% of the cases in the mutant compared to 83 % in the wild
type. An even stronger difference is apparent when counting nuclei with
both signals paired simultaneously. In only 2.9% of the mutant, but in
72% of wild-type nuclei, both signals were paired at once.
|
Synapsis was quantified by determining the fraction of nuclei with
long, bright, continuous Zip1-positive axes (corresponding to class 4 nuclei in Figs. 7 and 8). These could be clearly differentiated from
other Zip1-positive nuclei, because the Zip1 antibody binds strongly
only to the synapsed regions of chromosomes (Sym et al. 1993
). In wild
type 41% of the nuclei had extensive SCs, with an average total length
of 31.8 ± 7.0 µm (data from 37 nuclei). Only 7.3%
mre11S nuclei were largely synapsed, whereas the number of
Zip1-positive nuclei was similar to wild type (Table 4). In these
nuclei the total length of the SC complement was 28.3 ± 7.3 µm
(data from 29 nuclei). Therefore, SC length is not significantly different between wild type and mutant in the subpopulations described (class 4), the average mutant being only 3.5 µm or a factor of 0.89 shorter than the average wild-type SC.
If the SCs were homologous in the mre11 mutant the 7.3% of almost completely synapsed nuclei are expected to contribute largely to the fraction of nuclei with both signals paired. Double pairing may also occur in partially synapsed nuclei (class 2) or by presynaptic alignment in nuclei without synapsis. Therefore, the 7.3% contribution of the synapsed subpopulation alone represents a minimum estimate for the percentage of nuclei with both signals closely paired. The observed fraction of 2.9%, however, is clearly smaller than predicted by the amount of SC, indicating that a significant portion of the SCs formed in the mre11S mutant are connecting nonhomologous chromosomes.
| |
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
rad50 is epistatic to mre11S
A screen for new genes and functions that become essential after
initiation of meiotic DSBs was carried out which lead to the
identification of a new allele of MRE11 with unexpected
properties. MRE11 has been described before (Ajimura et al.
1993
) as one of the genes required for initiation of meiotic DSBs. The
mre11::hisG mutant is epistatic to rad50S, a
separation-of-function mutation that is only defective in the
processing of the meiotic DSBs, whereas the other function of
RAD50, namely formation of DSBs, is unaffected (Alani et al.
1990
; Ogawa et al. 1995
). The activity of the mre11 allele
described in this work mirrors this property in that it also forms
DSBs, but the rad50 null mutation is epistatic to the new
allele, which is therefore called mre11S. We conclude that the
respective proteins that have also been shown to interact physically in
a two-hybrid assay (Johzuka and Ogawa 1995
) are intimately associated
with the processes immediately before and after DSB formation.
Sequencing of the mutant allele identified two changes, Pro to Ser at
position 84 and Thr to Ile at position 188 of the predicted amino acid
sequence. The identified S mutations thus maps to the amino-terminal
part of the protein, which shows strong homologies to both eukaryotic
homologs of Mre11 and the prokaryotic SbcD (SbcD has nuclease activity)
(Connelly and Leach 1996
), whereas the carboxyl terminus does not
exhibit strong sequence conservation. This suggests that the core
regions and a possible catalytic domain reside in the amino terminal
half of the protein and the carboxyl terminus may have a more yeast
specific role. Strong homology to the bacterial SbcD is limited to
several short blocks throughout the amino terminus. Neither of the two
point mutations identified in mre11S maps to such a block but
to regions conserved among all eukaryotic Mre11 relatives. This may
mean that these are newly evolved regions in eukaryotes to serve
meiosis-specific functions. The affected domain may be involved in
regulation of Mre11p activity or in conserved protein-protein
interactions.
mre11S causes a defect in DSB processing and repair
The mre11S mutant was analyzed for possible defects during vegetative growth and in meiosis. Resistance to MMS in mre11S was between wild-type and homozygous disruptions. No indication for a similar mitotic hyper-recombination as in mre11 disruptions was found at two heteroalleles tested. This implies that mitotic functions of the Mre11Sp are largely intact or only weakened and that a possible catalytic function is not seriously impaired. Commitment to meiotic recombination as assayed by return to growth was also intermediate, suggesting that many of the induced DSBs could be repaired on vegetative medium in a mre11S strain. However, serious defects were found when cells were required to complete meiosis.
Spore formation and spore viability are strongly reduced in mre11S and in the mre11S spo13 mutants. On the other hand, a mre11S rad50 spo13 triple mutation is viable in meiosis. The most obvious explanation is that MRE11 function is dispensable because rad50 prevents DSB formation. In this study meiotic DSBs were shown to accumulate in the mre11S/mre11S mutant; therefore, the defective function is required for processing and repair of DSBs. Quantification of the relative amount of broken DNA revealed a difference between rad50S and mre11S at the his4-LEU2 locus. After a similar initial increase DSBs accumulated to a higher level in rad50S/rad50S than in mre11S/mre11S or in mre11S/mre11-T4. In addition, the latter two leveled off at 7 hr and decreased by 8.5 hr, indicating loss of breaks. Although nonspecific degradation of a fraction of DNA ends cannot be ruled out, DNA repair is suggested to explain the loss of breaks because the bands remained sharp at 8.5 hr. Such repair may cause the observed partial recombination competence in a mre11S strain in the return-to-growth experiment. However, neither heteroduplex DNA nor physical recombinants could be detected at his4-LEU2 in the homozygous mre11S strain under conditions where ~30% of wild-type levels would have been detected (data not shown). At the natural hot spot close to THR4 as well as at DED81 (data not shown) differences observed in DSB levels between rad50S and mre11S were less clear.
It is not known whether Spo11p, which remains covalently linked to the
5
ends of DSBs in rad50S and most likely also in
com1/sae2 mutants (de Massy et al. 1995
; Keeney
and Kleckner 1995
; Liu et al. 1995
; Keeney et al. 1997
), also does so
in mre11S mutants. It is likely because the DNA ends seem to
be blocked from processing. However, a fraction of the DSBs finally
disappears, suggesting that the DNA ends have been liberated. The
higher instability of DSBs in mre11S versus rad50S
observed at some recombination hot spots may be related to the higher
yield of gene conversions in mre11S versus rad50S
observed in return to growth. The fact that in such an experiment a
considerable fraction of cells remains viable after induction of
meiosis demonstrates that under vegetative conditions in a fraction of
the cells every break can be repaired .
The homology of Mre11p/Rad50p to the
SbcC/SbcD nuclease suggests that Mre11p might be the
catalytic subunit of a Mre11p/Rad50p complex, being
directly responsible for 5
resection at DSB sites either exo- or
endonucleolytically. This is compatible with the results from physical
DSB analysis and recombination studies assuming that a different
pathway that works more efficiently during mitosis (as seen in return
to growth) finally processes the breaks. Taking into account that
mitotic functions are largely intact, as discussed above, we propose
that a domain that regulates meiosis-specific Mre11p activity is
mutated in Mre11Sp. Recent results from studies in vegetatively growing
cells relate Mre11, Rad50, and Xrs2 to exonucleolytic function. Ivanov
et al. (1996)
have studied HO-induced illegitimate
recombination and found a retardation of 5
resection in
rad50 and xrs2 mutants. In mre11 strains,
repair thought to involve 5
resection is 10-fold reduced at
HO cuts (Moore and Haber 1996
) and 5
degradation is even
slower in mre11 than in rad50, but not absent (J. Haber, pers. comm.). These experiments show that there is residual
5
3
resection in the absence of MRE11. One
important difference between vegetative and meiotic repair processes
requiring Mre11p is the presumptive protection of 5
ends by Spo11p
in meiosis (Keeney et al. 1997
). A role for Mre11p/Rad50p
could therefore be to liberate Spo11p by a single strand
endonucleolytic step. A compatible activity has also been demonstrated
for SbcC/SbcD. In any case, Mre11p should be associated with meiotic chromosomes. When DSB processing was blocked in a rad50S mutant Myc-tagged Mre11p was found clustered in
distinct foci of varying intensity within spread nuclei (Nairz 1997
).
Intragenic complementation between mre11S and 3
disrupted alleles of MRE11
The fact that intragenic complementation was observed between
mre11S and the 3
disruptions strongly suggests that DSB
initiation and DSB processing functions reside in separate domains.
The regions truncated in the complementing alleles mre11-T4
and mre11-T10 lack strong sequence conservation. They are
nevertheless essential for DSB initiation, probably for interaction
with yeast-specific factors that allow access to the DNA or that
activate Spo11 endonuclease. These interactions as well as binding to
Rad50p, which has been shown to involve the amino terminus (Johzuka and
Ogawa 1995
), are intact in the mre11S mutant. The intragenic
complementation is best explained by homotypic interaction of Mre11
proteins. This is in good agreement with the demonstration that Mre11p
interacts with itself in two-hybrid studies (Johzuka and Ogawa 1995
).
Intragenic complementation for mre11 alleles can thus be
explained by a model in which a partially functional heteromultimeric
complex contains both Mre11-T4(T10)p and Mre11Sp. Whereas Mre11Sp
allows Spo11p to interact with the DNA, Mre11-T4(T10)p may contribute
the 5
resecting activity either alone or in conjunction with
another component. Less likely the carboxy-terminally truncated alleles reactivate the processing function of Mre11Sp through direct
interaction or Mre11Sp and Mre11-T4p work independently and
sequentially.
With MRE11 and RAD50 two genes are known to be
required both for initiation and repair of DSBs and these functions can
be separated in both genes. Furthermore, their products interact with
each other physically. Therefore, we propose a model in which a
complex, a "recombinosome", consisting of Rad50p, Mre11p, and other components required for recombinational repair, must be present
at a given hot spot to allow Spo11p to cut. The use of such
bifunctional complexes would greatly enhance repair efficiency by
eliminating the damage recognition step. Others have presented indirect
evidence that even the homologous template for DNA repair may already
be in place at the time of DSB initiation (Rocco and Nicolas 1996
; Xu
and Kleckner 1995
).
mre11S causes reduced, nonhomologous synapsis and decreases spore viability
The failure to process and repair the DSBs leads to a number of
observable consequences. Spore formation is generally reduced in
mre11S/mre11S, and the number of dyads rises
considerably at the cost of the number of complete tetrads. Of those
spores formed, viability is extremely low (1%). The first meiotic
division is delayed considerably in the SK1 strain background but not
in the disruption mutants (Fig. 8A-D). The delay was also observed for rad50S (Alani et al. 1990
) and for
com1/sae2 (Mc Kee and Kleckner 1997; Prinz et
al. 1997
). In other backgrounds these mutations may cause a complete
block. In the case of dmc1 the block has been shown to monitor
DSBs, utilizing the checkpoint genes MEC1, RAD17, and
RAD24 (Lydall et al. 1996
).
The spreading of yeast nuclei revealed other consequences of the absent
repair of DSBs. SC precursors were enriched relative to wild type, and
a new class of nuclei containing long unsynapsed AEs appeared possibly
as a consequence of delayed synapsis, most likely caused by the absence
of 3
single-stranded ends for homology search. However, even in
the absence of repair of the majority of DSBs there was extensive SC
formation in a fraction of mre11S nuclei. Such synapsis has
also been observed in rad50S cells (Loidl et al. 1994
) and in
com1/sae2 nuclei (Prinz et al. 1997
). However, in all such cases, synapsis seemed aberrant in that sometimes network-like structures were observed but never the complete chromosome complement with 16 separate bivalents. In this study evidence for
partner switches of axial elements is presented, which suggests nonhomologous synapsis. In corroboration of this finding the fraction of nuclei with homologously associated FISH signals was compared to the
fraction of nuclei exhibiting extensive SCs. Considerably more nuclei
were found with almost the complete chromosome complement synapsed than
nuclei with two signals paired concomitantly. We conclude that at least
in a fraction of the completely synapsed nuclei homologous signals were
not paired, that is, that at least some synapsed regions were
nonhomologous. It has been shown earlier for yeast that synapsis of
nonhomologous chromosomes is possible in haploid yeast (Loidl et al.
1991
). Also nonhomologous synapsis in haploids depends on
RAD50 and other DSB initiation genes (F. Klein, unpubl.). We
therefore propose that synapsis requires the presence of DSBs but that
homologous synapsis is only ensured by at least the formation of the
3
-overhanging single-stranded DNA ends. In DSB negative mutants
(e.g., in mre11-T4/mre11-T4) synapsis does
normally not take place, but in DSB-accumulating mutants the homologous
registration fails while synapsis occurs by default and irrespective of
homologies. The few cases where long axial elements and extensive
synapsis is found in mre11-T4/mre11-T4 may be
explained by initiation of synapsis through DSBs below the limits of
physical detection. These DSBs may only occur in a very small
subpopulation and may not be sufficient to ensure viability.
A model presenting a unified view of the relation between DNA metabolism and formation of SCs and their precursors is introduced (Fig. 10). Axial elements do form in the absence of DSBs, as observed in many different null mutants. Unprocessed DSBs allow for synapsis which is at least partially nonhomologous, as shown for mre11S. Synapsis induced by unrepaired DSBs may represent a default pathway that comes into effect when no homologies are found representing the uncoupling of synapsis from homology search. Homologous synapsis is ensured only by the recombination processes that follow DSB formation, processing, and strand invasion. These processes are likely to establish homologous interactions that allows synapsis of the proper axial elements.
|
| |
Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Media, genetic techniques, growth regimen, and ether killing
Yeast was grown in rich medium (YPD), synthetic complete medium
lacking factors (SC
) or minimal medium supplemented with specific
factors (SD+) as described (Rose et al. 1990
). Presporulation medium
(YPA) was 1% yeast extract (Difco), 2% peptone (Difco), 2% potassium
acetate, and SPM was 2% potassium acetate (pH 7) (optionally
solidified with 2% agar). However, sporulation of strain Y136 on solid
medium was performed on SPM+ (0.25% yeast extract, 0.1% glucose,
1.5% potassium acetate plus one-fortieth volume of an amino acid and
nucleotide mix containing 40 mg of Pro, 80 mg of Tyr, 200 mg of His,
Leu, Lys, Met,Trp, and Arg, 400 mg of Ade and Ura, and 1 gram of Phe
per 25 ml). MMS (Schuchardt) was added to YPD just prior to pouring
plates. Asci were digested with 200 µg/ml of
Zymolyase 20T (Seikagaku Kogyo Ltd) for 20 min at 37°C for tetrad
dissection.
Sporulation for DSB assays, SC spreading, and return to growth was done
as described by Loidl et al. (1994)
. Commitment to meiotic
recombination was monitored in return-to-growth experiments as
described (Sherman and Roman 1963
; Alani et al. 1990
). Samples of
synchronized sporulating cells were taken at the specified time after
transfer to liquid SPM, sonicated, diluted, and plated on at least two
YPD, SC
HIS, and SC
ARG petri dishes. Ether treatment for
enrichment of spores by selectively killing unsporulated cells was
performed as described recently (Prinz et al. 1997
).
Plasmids
p3 was derived from pNKY1070 (a YCP50-based RAD50 plasmid from N. Kleckner, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA) by cutting with SalI and religating it to yield p1. p1 was digested with EcoRI and ligated to a 3.95-kb EcoRI fragment from R990 (S. Roeder, Yale University, New Haven, CT) containing ADE2 (and 460 bp of mer2 sequence). URA3 was removed by deleting a 1.6 kb SmaI-NruI fragment. p21 was constructed by ligating a 2.2-kb BamHI-NruI fragment from pTW15 (R. Esposito, University of Chicago, IL) containing SPO13 coding sequence into pRS315 (Sikorski and Hieter 1989), which was cut with HindIII, blunted by filling in, and then cut with BamHI. p265 originated from YCplac33 (Gietz and Sugino1988) into which a 4.3-kb BamHI fragment containing MRE11 was inserted. p266 is derived from p265 by gap repair (see Cloning and Sequencing, below).
Mutagenesis
Strain Y136 was grown on SC-ADE-URA for 2 days, transferred to
YPD for 8 hr, and sporulated on 2% potassium acetate plates for 24 hr.
Asci were resuspended in 150 µl of 10 mM DTT with 50 µg of Zymolyase 20T (Seikagaku), incubated for 90 min at 37°C, and sonicated for 5 × 5 sec on ice to obtain single spores. Spores (5 × 107) in 1 ml were mutagenized for 30 min at 30°C
with 27 or 32 ng/ml of MNNG (Sigma) to a viability of
86% or 36% (corresponding to a 5- or 20-fold increase in
canavanine-resistant colonies as a measure of mutational yield) and
frozen in 50% glycerol at
80°C. After determination of
viability the mutagenized spores were diluted and plated to a density
of 180 or 275 colonies per SC-ADE plate. After 2 days colonies were
replica-plated to SPM+. After 3 days of sporulation at 30° the
colonies were stamped onto YPD, ether treated to select for spores, and
incubated for another 3 days at 30°C. Twenty-two candidates of
18,000 colonies of the first mutagenesis and 16 candidates of 13,000 colonies of the second mutagenesis formed red patches and were
isolated.
Cloning and sequencing
Because difficulties were expected in crossing out mutant alleles
that prevent successful meiosis from a homothallic diploid strain, the
affected gene was cloned by direct complementation of the spore
viability defect. Among eight mutant candidates, number 220 was chosen
for complementation. The candidate was transformed with a CEN-based
genomic URA3 library [a gift of Brian Jensen and Breck Byers
(University of Washington, Seattle) made from a A364A derivative], and
transformants were selected on SM
URA, SM
ADE, and SM
LEU to
ascertain the presence of both the library plasmid and of plasmids p21
(SPO13, LEU2) and p3 (RAD50, ADE2), which allows
initiation of recombination in cells with "white" progeny. The
resulting colonies were sporulated on SPM+, replica plated to YPD,
ether treated, and examined for the appearance of white patches. One
such patch was detected, indicating that cells had regained the ability
to form viable spores in the presence of RAD50 and
SPO13. Such spores were directly mated to strain Y7, and a
descendant (ho, RAD50, spo
) was further crossed to strain
Y5. In 12 of 12 complete tetrads from this cross, the sporulation
defect segregated 2 : 2, indicating Mendelian behavior of a recessive
gene. When 104 spores from this cross were analyzed, 51 were
spo
and 53 were SPO+.
The complementing plasmid was isolated, the large insert was subcloned
into YCplac33, and the resulting plasmid p265, containing a 4.3-kb
BamHI fragment of the insert with a central ClaI
site, proved sufficient to complement the sporulation defect of Y233. Neither the internal 2.0-kb ClaI-BamHI nor the
2.3-kb ClaI-BamHI fragment alone could complement
identifying the ClaI site as mapping within the coding
sequence. Both fragments were subcloned into Bluescript SK
and
sequenced from the ClaI site by the dideoxy chain-termination
method (Sanger et al. 1977
) using the T7 sequencing kit (Pharmacia) and
35S-labeled dATP (New England Nuclear). The result identified
the sequence as a meiotic recombination gene, MRE11, that had
just been published by Johzuka and Ogawa (1995)
.
The cloning and sequencing of mre11S
mre11S was recovered by gap repair (Orr-Weaver et al.
1983
): A haploid strain (Y227 mre11S, ura3) was transformed to
URA+ with the gel-purified 7.9-kb AflII-NruI
fragment of p265 devoid of the complete MRE11 coding and of
170-bp MRE11 upstream sequence (Fig. 3A). The gap-paired
plasmid, p266, was recovered from a transformant, amplified in E. coli, and transformed into Y233 (mre11S/mre11S) for complementation of the
mre11S-dependent sporulation defect. p266 did not restore
sporulation in nine of nine transformants tested.
For sequencing of mre11S (p266) and MRE11 (p265)
various restriction fragments were subcloned into Bluescript (SK
).
In addition, a set of exonuclease III-generated deletions were derived
from SphI-AflII double-digested p266 (Sambrook et
al. 1989
) and sequenced using universal primers MJ3 and MJ4 (MJ3,
5
-AGCGGATAACAATTTCACACAGGA-3
, MJ4,
5
-CGCCAGGGTTTTCCCAGTCACGAC-3
). The SK1-derived
mre11S sequence differed from the published sequence (Johzuka
and Ogawa 1995
) at two positions in the promotor (
28 and
4), 4 redundant sites (+219, +786, +843, +