Previous Article | Next Article 
Molecular and Cellular Biology, July 1999, p. 4832-4842, Vol. 19, No. 7
0270-7306/99/$04.00+0
Use of a Recombination Reporter Insert To Define
Meiotic Recombination Domains on Chromosome III of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Valérie
Borde,
Tzu-Chen
Wu, and
Michael
Lichten*
Laboratory of Biochemistry, Division of Basic
Science, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Received 10 February 1999/Returned for modification 29 March
1999/Accepted 9 April 1999
 |
ABSTRACT |
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, meiotic recombination is
initiated by DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). DSBs usually occur in intergenic regions that display nuclease hypersensitivity in digests of
chromatin. DSBs are distributed nonuniformly across chromosomes; on
chromosome III, DSBs are concentrated in two "hot" regions, one in
each chromosome arm. DSBs occur rarely in regions within about 40 kb of
each telomere and in an 80-kb region in the center of the chromosome,
just to the right of the centromere. We used recombination reporter
inserts containing arg4 mutant alleles to show that the
"cold" properties of the central DSB-deficient region are imposed
on DNA inserted in the region. Cold region inserts display DSB and
recombination frequencies that are substantially less than those seen
with similar inserts in flanking hot regions. This occurs without
apparent change in chromatin structure, as the same pattern and level
of DNase I hypersensitivity is seen in chromatin of hot and cold region
inserts. These data are consistent with the suggestion that features of
higher-order chromosome structure or chromosome dynamics act in a
target sequence-independent manner to control where recombination
events initiate during meiosis.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Recombination ensures the proper
segregation of homologs at the first meiotic division in most
eucaryotic organisms (28, 56, 57, 60). Crossovers hold
homolog pairs together, ensuring their proper alignment on the meiosis
I spindle and providing the tension necessary for spindle integrity
(47). Mutant cells that fail to initiate meiotic
recombination display marked (and lethal) homolog nondisjunction at
meiosis I (2, 12, 27, 42, 43). Even in wild-type cells,
homolog pairs that fail to recombine are at increased risk for meiosis
I nondisjunction (9, 22, 30, 31).
Not all crossovers are equally effective at promoting proper homolog
disjunction. Human chromosomes 16 or 21 with crossovers near the
telomeres are at increased risk for meiosis I nondisjunction during
oogenesis (22, 31, 32); a similar phenomenon was reported in
studies of the meiotic segregation of minichromosomes in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (58). These data
underscore the need not only for mechanisms that control the amount of
meiotic recombination per chromosome but also for control over the
chromosomal location of exchange events.
Evidence that such mechanisms do exist is also inferred from observed
nonuniformities in the amount of meiotic recombination per unit
physical distance in a variety of organisms (36). It is
likely that most of this variation is due to differences in frequencies
of initiation events, although some of this variation may be due to
crossover interference (24, 28). In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) initiate meiotic
recombination (reviewed in references 28, 36, 48,
and 60). DSBs form at chromatin sites that are
nuclease hypersensitive (15, 26, 50, 68). These open sites
are most often found in promoter regions (21, 68) but are
also found in nonpromoter regions in artificial constructs (15,
26, 67). It has been suggested that the close correlation between
DSB and nuclease-hypersensitive sites reflects the preferential binding
of DSB-forming proteins at places where DNA is exposed (68).
Active DSB sites display an increase in micrococcal nuclease
sensitivity early in meiosis I prophase, an increase that is suggested
to result from the binding of DSB-forming complexes (49,
50).
DSBs also show nonuniform distributions along chromosomes. This has
been documented in pulsed-field gel analyses of several yeast
chromosomes (29, 39, 72). In general, the majority of DSBs
occur in regions ca. 50 to 100 kb in length. These "hot" regions
are separated by regions of similar size that lack DSBs. DSBs also are
absent from sequences within 40 to 50 kb of telomeres (29,
39). Baudat and Nicolas (3) used conventional agarose electrophoresis to determine the location and frequency of DSBs along
the entire 340 kb of chromosome III (Fig.
1). They found that the majority of
detectable DSBs occur at sites in two hot regions 70 to 90 kb in
length. These two domains, referred here to as hot regions II and IV,
are located on the left and right arms, respectively, of chromosome
III. Very few DSBs occur near the telomeres (cold regions I and V) and
in a central 80-kb central region (cold region III).

View larger version (33K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 1.
Structure of the recombination construct and insert
locations. (A) DSBs on chromosome III. Breaks were mapped by
pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of DNA prepared from MJL2305 just
before (mitotic) or 6 h after (meiotic) transfer to sporulation
medium. The probe used was a PCR fragment from the left end of
chromosome III (nt 15838 to 16857). Positions of DSB regions I to V
(3) are indicated above the autoradiogram; locations of the
cold region URA3-arg4 inserts used in this study are
indicated on the map of chromosome III below the autoradiogram. (B)
Structure of inserts. Plasmids contain pBR322 sequences (thick line), a
1.2-kb HindIII URA3 fragment (hatched box),
and a 3.3-kb PstI arg4 fragment (open box),
containing either the arg4-nsp or arg4-bgl
allele. Thin lines represent flanking genomic sequences used for
integration, with × indicating the restriction site used for
integration. Vertical arrows indicate the approximate location of DSBs
seen in all inserts.
|
|
There are two possible classes of explanation for this nonuniform break
distribution. The first suggests that DSBs fail to occur in cold
regions because these regions lack suitable substrates for DSB
formation, either by lacking potential open chromatin sites or by
chromatin occlusion via silencing processes similar to those seen at
telomeres and at silent mating-type cassettes (19, 66). An
alternative hypothesis is that systems repress or promote DSB formation
sites in cold and hot regions without affecting underlying chromatin
structure (3). Sequences inserted into a hot or cold region
should also be affected by such systems and therefore should display
frequencies of recombination and DSBs characteristic of the region in
which they are inserted. Previous studies have shown that location in
the genome can affect the frequency of meiotic recombination and DSBs
within a sequence (18, 35, 67, 69). However, these studies
did not directly address the relationship between DSB and recombination
frequencies seen within an insert and the hot or cold nature of the
region where it is inserted.
We present here an examination of the mechanisms responsible for the
absence of DSBs from the cold region in the center of chromosome III.
We compare this region with other regions on the chromosome in terms of
overall accessibility of DNA in chromatin to exogenously added
DNase I and to endogenous topoisomerase II. We have examined the
ability of hot and cold regions to promote or repress recombination and
DSBs within recombination reporter inserts and used these inserts to
define the boundaries of the central cold region. The same inserts were
also used to determine the amount of crossing over that occurs within
different segments of the central cold region.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Yeast strains and plasmids.
Insert locations on chromosome
III are illustrated in Fig. 1. Yeast strains and plasmids are described
in Tables 1
and 2, respectively. All yeast strains are of the SK1 background
(25). All plasmids are derived from pMJ113 or pMJ115, which
contain pBR322 sequences, the URA3 gene, and
arg4-nsp or arg4-bgl alleles, respectively
(67). PCR fragments with added EcoRI sites were generated from yeast genomic DNA from MJL1059 (67) and
cloned into the EcoRI site of pMJ113 or pMJ115. A unique
site in the PCR fragment was used to linearize and integrate the
resulting plasmid. Integration sites were chosen to reside in
intergenic regions, preferably between the 3' ends of two genes.
pMJ113- and pMJ115-derived plasmid integrants were obtained by
transformation of S105 (MATa ura3 lys2 ho::LYS2
leu2-R arg4-nsp,bgl) and S95 (MAT
ura3 lys2
ho::LYS2 leu2-K arg4-nsp,bgl), respectively (67). Insert-containing haploid parents of rad50S
diploid strains were obtained by tetrad dissection of diploids formed
by crossing insert-containing RAD50 haploids with a haploid
parent of NKY1002 (7). The sae2
::KanMX6
mutation contains a SacI-SmaI fragment from pFA6
(64) encoding G418 resistance inserted between the SacI and EcoRV sites of SAE2
(nucleotides [nt] 60 and 643 of the SAE2 open reading
frame).
Media and genetic techniques.
Standard methods and media
were used for growth and mating. Transformation of strains was done as
described elsewhere (4). Meiotic segregants were analyzed
either by tetrad dissection or by random spore analysis
(35). Linkage and centromere linkage analysis was done as
described elsewhere, using TRP1 as a centromere-linked marker (46). For sae2::KanMX
transformants, cells were grown for 4 h after transformation in
YPD containing 1 M sorbitol before selecting on YPD plates containing 1 M sorbitol and 400 µg of G418 (Gibco/BRL) per ml. Sporulation in
liquid cultures was as described elsewhere (20).
DSB detection.
Meiotic DSBs were detected in diploids
homozygous for either rad50KI80 (rad50S) or
sae2::KanMX. In both types of strains, meiotic DSBs are
not resected after formation (1, 41, 53). Meiotic DNA was
prepared 6 to 7 h after the initiation of sporulation. For
conventional gel electrophoresis, DNA was prepared as described elsewhere (20) except that cells were rapidly spheroplasted in 1 M sorbitol-10 mM EDTA-50 mM potassium phosphate-1 mg of
lyticase (ICN) per ml (pH 7.5), and DNA was prepared immediately after harvesting of cells. Previous DNA extraction methods used cells that
had been fixed in ethanol (7). In DNA from such cells, some
meiosis-specific DSBs seen in the insert were stronger than in DNA
prepared immediately after harvesting of cells. This is most likely due
to the action of Nuc1p, a mitochondrial nuclease that is released upon
storage in ethanol (10). For pulsed-field gel analysis of
DSBs, 50-ml aliquots of a premeiotic or meiotic culture (about 2 × 109 cells) were washed three times with 50 mM EDTA (pH
7.5) at room temperature and resuspended with 0.33 ml of 50 mM EDTA;
0.5 ml of this suspension was mixed with 1 ml of 0.83%
low-melting-point agarose (FMC)-170 mM sorbitol-17 mM sodium
citrate-10 mM EDTA-0.85%
-mercaptoethanol-0.17 mg of Zymolase
100T (ICN) per ml (pH 7.0), poured into molds, and allowed to solidify
for 10 min at 4°C. Plugs were incubated as follows: 2 h at
37°C in 10 ml of 450 mM EDTA-10 mM Tris-HCl-7.5%
-mercaptoethanol-0.1 µg of RNase A per ml (pH 7.5); overnight at
50°C in 10 ml of 450 mM EDTA-10 mM Tris-HCl-1% sodium dodecyl
sulfate (SDS)-1 mg of proteinase K per ml (pH 7.5); two changes of 10 ml of 50 mM EDTA (pH 7.5) for 30 min at room temperature. Plugs were
stored at
20°C in 10 ml of 50 mM EDTA-50% glycerol (pH 7.5). As a
control for general DSB formation, we checked in each strain that DSBs
occurred at the normal arg4 locus on chromosome VIII at
normal frequencies (68). The average frequency at this locus
was 4% ± 0.7% (data not shown).
DNase I-hypersensitive and topoisomerase II cleavage site
mapping.
The protocol of Wu and Lichten (68) was used.
For mitotic cells, exponential-phase cultures grown in YPD (optical
density at 600 nm of 1) were used. For meiotic cells, we used the SPS preculture (0 h) and cultures 2 or 4 h after transfer to
sporulation medium. Cells were pelleted and resuspended in 1/10 the
original culture volume of 1 M sorbitol-50 mM potassium phosphate (pH
7.5)-10 mM MgCl2-1%
-mercaptoethanol-0.4 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. After 5 min of incubation at
30°C, cells were pelleted and resuspended in an equal volume of 1 M
sorbitol-25 mM potassium phosphate-25 mM sodium succinate (pH
5.5)-10 mM MgCl2-0.3%
-mercaptoethanol-0.4 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 0.67 mg of Zymolase 100T (ICN) per ml
and incubated at 30°C for 3 to 5 min. Spheroplast formation was
monitored by microscope until cells were 80 to 90% spheroplasts. Crude
nuclei were prepared and digested with DNase I as described elsewhere
(68) except that in the pulsed-field gel experiments, a
prepared cocktail of protease inhibitors (Complete, EDTA-free; Boehringer) was used, and DNase digests were for 2 min at 0°C. For
pulsed-field gel analysis, 2 volumes of 1% low-melting-point agarose-50 mM EDTA pH 7.5 was added to digests, and the mixture was
poured into molds and allowed to harden for 10 min at 4°C. Plugs were
then processed as described above. For topoisomerase II cleavage, crude
nuclei were resuspended in topo II buffer (6), VM26 (stock
solution 10 mM in dimethyl sulfoxide; a gift from Yves Pommier) or
CP-115.953 (stock solution 5 mM in 10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5]; kindly
provided by Pfizer Inc.) was added to the desired concentration, and
mixtures were incubated 30 min at 30°C. Two volumes of 1%
low-melting-point agarose in topo II buffer plus drug was added, and
reaction mixtures were poured into molds and allowed to harden 10 min
at room temperature. Plugs were then soaked for 2 h at room
temperature in 1% SDS and then treated with proteinase K and processed
as described above.
Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis.
Agarose plugs were
equilibrated against 1 ml of 0.5× Tris-borate-EDTA (59) for
10 min at room temperature. Electrophoresis was performed at 14°C in
a CHEF Mapper (Bio-Rad), using 1.3% agarose gels in 0.5×
Tris-borate-EDTA, a voltage gradient of 6 V/cm, a switch angle 120°,
and switch times of 15 s (initial) to 25 s (final). Total run
time was 43 h.
DNA transfer and hybridization.
Electrophoresis, transfer to
Zetaprobe GT membranes (Bio-Rad), and hybridization with probe were as
previously described (67). A Fuji Bas2000 phosphorimager and
MacBAS software were used for image capture and DSB quantitation.
 |
RESULTS |
Cold and hot regions show similar patterns of chromatin
accessibility to both DNaseI and endogenous topoisomerase II.
One
way to account for the different levels of DSBs seen in different
regions of chromosome III would be to assume that cold regions contain
mostly closed chromatin and therefore are inaccessible to DSB-forming
proteins. To test this, we examined the accessibility of chromatin
along the length of chromosome III, using cleavage of chromatin from
vegetative cells either by an exogenously added enzyme, DNase I, or by
an endogenous yeast enzyme, topoisomerase II. Topoisomerase II cleavage
sites were mapped by using two drugs (CP-115,953 and VM26) that trap
covalently linked topoisomerase II-DNA complexes (13, 38).
These complexes are converted to permanent breaks by treatment with SDS
and protease (38). Pulsed-field gel analysis was used to
compare DNase I and topoisomerase II cleavage patterns with those of
DSBs. Pulsed-field gels have the advantage of allowing the
visualization of break or cleavage patterns along the entire length of
a chromosome. The resolution of this method is limited, however, and
frequently what appears to be a single band on a pulsed-field gel
reflects the presence of multiple cleavage sites distributed over a
region several kilobases in length.
Similar results were obtained with DNase I and with the two
topoisomerase II inhibitors (Fig. 2).
DNase I and topoisomerase II cleavage sites are distributed irregularly
along the chromosome, with no obvious concentration in any region. In
particular, the central cold region (III) and the two terminal cold
regions (I and V) are cleaved as often as are hot regions II and IV.
There is a substantial correspondence between DNase I and topoisomerase II cleavage patterns, as would be expected if both enzymes act preferentially in open regions of chromatin. In hot regions II and IV,
this correspondence extends to the location of DSB peaks as well. We
conclude that the three cold regions do not differ from the hot regions
in terms of chromatin accessibility and that the cold regions would
therefore be expected to contain many potential DSB sites.

View larger version (59K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 2.
Chromatin structure and topoisomerase II cleavage of
mitotic chromosome III. Mitotic and meiotic rad50S samples
are from MJL2305, 0 and 6 h, respectively, after transfer to
sporulation medium. Chromatin was prepared from exponentially growing
cells of strain MJL1578. For topoisomerase II (TopoII) cleavage sites,
chromatin was incubated with 1% dimethyl sulfoxide (C), 100 µM
CP-115,953 (CP), or 100 µM VM26 (VM); for DNase I-sensitive sites,
chromatin was incubated with the indicated concentration of DNase I
(U/µg of DNA). DNA was displayed on a pulsed-field gel (see Materials
and Methods), and the resulting filter was probed with a
CHA1 probe (chromosome III nt 15838 to 16857) (A) or a
YCR098c probe (nt 296511 to 297070) (B). Lanes M contain
bacteriophage DNA concatemers plus a HindIII digest
of bacteriophage . The hot or cold DSB regions I to V are indicated
alongside each panel.
|
|
Meiotic recombination within a recombination reporter construct is
governed by chromosomal context.
If cold regions I, III, and V
contain potential DSB sites, what prevents the formation of DSBs at
those sites? One explanation is that open sites present in these
regions contain sequences refractory to DSB formation. An alternate
explanation is that factors necessary for DSBs are absent from cold
regions, or that systems operate in cold regions to actively suppress
DSB formation. In either of the latter cases, it might be expected that
DSB formation would be affected not only in sequences normally resident
in cold regions but also in sequences inserted within the same regions.
To test this, we measured both meiotic recombination and DSBs in a
recombination reporter construct inserted at several locations on
chromosome III (Fig. 1). This 8.5-kb construct contains the URA3 gene as a selectable marker and an ARG4
fragment marked with either of two arg4 mutant alleles (Fig.
1B). A previous study showed that both recombination and DSBs within
this construct display position effects: they are affected in parallel
by the location of inserts in the genome (67). In the
present study, we examined meiotic recombination and DSBs in 10 inserts
on chromosome III. One insert is in the left-arm terminal cold region I
(at CHA1), three are in the left-arm hot region II (at
HIS4, LEU2, and YCL011c), five are in
the central cold region III (YCR004c, RVS161,
YCR017c, YCR026c, and RIM1), and one
is at MAT, in the right-arm hot region IV (Fig. 1A). Four of
these insert loci had been studied previously (20, 67); the
others were constructed for the present study.
Recombination at each insert locus was measured by determining
frequencies of Arg+ spores produced by meiotic
recombination between arg4-nsp and arg4-bgl
inserts at allelic locations. Arg+ frequencies varied over
a 15-fold range, from 1.2 × 10
3 to 1.9 × 10
2 (Table 3). All inserts
in cold regions I or III produced recombinants at frequencies that were
less than those seen for inserts in hot regions. Among cold
region inserts, the lowest recombination frequencies were
obtained with inserts closest to CEN3
(RVS161::arg4, 1.2 × 10
3;
YCR004c::arg4, 1.7 × 10
3), and
the greatest recombination frequency (7.0 × 10
3)
was obtained with RIM1::arg4, the cold region insert
furthest from the centromere. We did not detect a discrete boundary
between cold region III and hot region IV; instead, frequencies of
Arg+ recombinants increased gradually with insert distance
from the centromere. For example, the frequency of Arg+
recombinants from diploids with the cold region III insert
RIM1::arg4 (7.0 × 10
3) was similar
to that seen in MAT::arg4 strains (9.4 × 10
3); this latter insert is 26 kb more centromere distal
and well within hot region IV. By contrast, there appears to be a much sharper boundary between cold region III and hot region II. Strains with YCL011c::arg4 inserts, located to the left of
CEN3 in hot region II, display a frequency of
Arg+ recombinants (1.0 × 10
2) sixfold
greater than that seen in strains with inserts only 16 kb away, at
YCR004c (1.7 × 10
3).
We also measured the frequency of recombination between the
leu2-K and leu2-R alleles as a general control.
With two exceptions, all strains displayed similar frequencies of
Leu+ meiotic recombinants (mean = 4.0 × 10
3; greatest deviation = 0.5 × 10
3). Inserts at HIS4 and at
YCL011c caused a significant (about 2.5-fold) reduction in
the frequency of Leu+ recombinants recovered, most likely a
result of an insert-dependent local inhibition of DSBs at nearby sites
(67, 70).
The frequency of DSBs within inserts is governed by chromosomal
context.
If most events producing Arg+ recombinants
are initiated by DSBs that form within insert sequences, the frequency
of breaks in URA3-arg4 inserts should display position
effects similar to those seen for meiotic recombination frequencies. To
test this suggestion, we determined the location and frequency of DSBs
within the URA3-arg4 inserts used to measure recombination,
using otherwise isogenic rad50S or sae2 strains.
As was seen previously (67), DSBs occur at the same place
within inserts at all loci (illustrated in Fig. 1). One group of breaks
(DSB-left) is located in pBR322 sequences, between
URA3 and arg4. A second group of breaks
(DSB-right) is located in a 1.8-kb pBR322 region just to the
right of arg4 sequences. Breaks at the insert-borne
arg4 promoter are either absent or barely detectable. By
contrast, the normal ARG4 locus displays strong breaks in
its promoter region in all strains (data not shown); these breaks occur
in 4.0 ± 0.7% of chromosomes, a value in good agreement with
that seen for strains without inserts (67).
To quantitatively compare DSB frequencies in different inserts, we used
restriction enzymes that cut at sites common to all inserts and probed
blots with pBR322 fragments (Fig. 3 and
Table 3). Quantitative analysis indicates that the total frequency of
DSBs within inserts increases in parallel with the frequency of
ARG4 recombinants (Table 3; Fig.
4). Overall, there is an almost 10-fold
variation in the frequency of breaks within inserts, from 1.9% at
RVS161::arg4 to 16.5% at his4::arg4, and
inserts in cold regions display break frequencies significantly less
than those in hot regions. Thus, DSB position effects are exerted in a
target sequence-independent manner.

View larger version (47K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 3.
DSBs in inserts at different locations on chromosome III
detected by using pBR322 sequences as probes. (A) DSBs between
URA3 and arg4 sequences (DSB-left). DNA was
digested with PstI (P), which cuts in pBR322 and in
URA3, and probed with a PstI-AlwNI
fragment from pBR322. DSB-left is indicated by a solid arrow, and the
ARG4 promoter (prom.) is indicated by a dotted arrow.
Mitotic DNA is from MJL2105. Meiotic DNAs are, from left to right:
MJL2105, MJL2144, MJL2237, MJL1185, MJL2139, MJL2106, MJL1176,
MJL1170, MJL2324, and MJL2326. (B) DSBs in the pBR322 sequence
downstream of the arg4 fragment (DSB-right). DNA was cut
with StuI (St) and a locus-specific enzyme:
RSV161, SacII; YCR004c,
AflII; YCR017c, AflII;
CHA1, XhoI; YCR026c, AflII;
RIM1, SphI; MAT, XbaI;
YCL011c, AflII; LEU2,
AflII; and HIS4, Bpu1102I. The probe
used was a HindIII-BamHI pBR322 fragment.
DSB-right is indicated by solid arrows and the ARG4 promoter
is indicated by a dotted arrow. Mitotic DNA is from MJL2105. Meiotic
DNAs are, from left to right: MJL2105, MJL2144, MJL2237, MJL2139,
MJL1185, MJL1176, MJL2324, MJL2326, and MJL1170.
|
|

View larger version (34K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 4.
Frequencies of DSBs and recombination within
URA3-arg4 inserts. Chromosome III DSB hot and cold regions
are indicated. The thick horizontal lines denote a physical map of
chromosome III, with 50-kb intervals indicated by vertical hatches and
the centromere marked by a filled circle. Bars in the top panel
indicate the frequency of Arg+ recombinants within each
insert (hatched bars); bars in the bottom panel indicate the
frequencies of both DSB-left (shaded) and DSBs-right (white) for
inserts at the same location. Recombination data for inserts at
MAT, CHA1, LEU2, and HIS4
are from a previous study (67).
|
|
As was seen with Arg+ recombinants, insert DSB frequencies
increase gradually with distance from the centromere at the right-hand boundary of cold region III and increase more abruptly at the left-hand
cold region boundary. However, the magnitude of position effects is not
the same at DSB-left and DSB-right. Among cold region inserts, the
frequency of breaks at DSB-left varies 5-fold, from 0.47%
(RVS161::arg4) to 2.5% (RIM1::arg4); a
30-fold variation is observed among all inserts on chromosome III. The
frequency of breaks at DSB-right is less affected by insert location,
showing only a twofold variation among inserts in the cold region
(1.4% at RVS161 to 2.9% at RIM1) and about a
sixfold variation overall. Moreover, there are marked differences in
the ratio of break frequencies at DSB-left and DSB-right within an
insert (Table 3). At one extreme, his4::arg4, breaks
at DSB-left exceed breaks at DSB-right by a factor of 3.7; at the
other, RVS161::arg4, the ratio of breaks at DSB-left to
DSB-right is 0.36.
Both hot and cold region inserts display similar patterns and
levels of chromatin DNase I sensitivity.
The finding that
URA3-arg4 inserts take on the recombination/DSB properties
of the region in which they reside makes it unlikely that underlying
DNA sequence is responsible for differences between hot and cold
regions. However, it remained possible that differences in chromatin
structure were responsible for the differences in recombination and DSB
frequencies seen in hot and cold region inserts. To test this
suggestion, we quantitatively compared the pattern and level of DNase I
sensitivity of a hot region insert with those of a cold region insert.
This was done by using chromatin prepared from a diploid strain in
which one copy of chromosome III contained a
his4::URA3-arg4 insert in hot region IV and the other
chromosome copy contained the cold region insert
RVS161::URA3-arg4 (Fig.
5A). The presence of unique restriction
sites flanking each insert, combined with locus-specific probes,
allowed the detection of DSBs or DNase I-hypersensitive sites in the
hot and cold region inserts by sequential probing of the same membrane.
This permitted direct quantitative comparison of the extent of DNase I
hypersensitivity in hot and cold region inserts.

View larger version (39K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 5.
DNase I-hypersensitive sites in the URA3-arg4
insert at HIS4 and RVS161. (A) Location of the
URA3-arg4 insert on each chromosome III of strain MJL2418.
(B) DSBs and DNase I-hypersensitive sites in inserts. DNA was cut with
both AflII and XbaI, and the same filter was
probed successively with an RVS161 probe (nt 128743 to
129300; left) and a HIS4 probe (nt 65967 to 66522; right).
For DNase I, chromatin from MJL2418 was prepared at indicated times
after transfer to sporulation medium and incubated with DNase I. Lanes:
1, 4, and 6, no DNase I; 2 and 5: 0.8 U of DNase I/µg of DNA; 3, 0.8 U of DNase I/µg of DNA; 7, 2 U of DNase I/µg of DNA. For
rad50S DSBs, DNA from MJL2420 0 h (lanes 9) or 6 h
(lanes 8) after transfer to sporulation medium. (C) Quantitative
comparison of DNase I digestion profiles of URA3-arg4
inserts located at either RVS161 (thin lines) or
HIS4 (thick lines). Densitometric profiles of lanes 3 (0 h),
5 (2 h), and 7 (4 h) are superimposed.
|
|
DSB locations and frequencies at each insert locus, measured in a
rad50S derivative of this strain, are similar to those
observed in diploids with homozygous inserts at one or at the other
locus (Fig. 5B and data not shown). This finding confirms previous
conclusions that DSB formation is not markedly affected by the presence
or absence of a homologous sequence at an allelic position on a
homologue (11, 17, 67). DSBs occurred frequently at
his4::URA3-arg4 and infrequently at
RVS161::URA3-arg4. By contrast, the two inserts display
similar patterns of DNase I sensitivity in chromatin isolated from RAD50 cultures before (0 and 2 h) and after
(4 h) the time of DSB formation. DNase I-hypersensitive sites are
present at the arg4 promoter and at the same locations as
DSB-left and DSB-right (Fig. 5B). Quantitative comparison revealed
similar levels of DNase I hypersensitivity at
his4::URA3-arg4 and at RVS161::URA3-arg4 in chromatin samples taken at 0 and 2 h (Fig. 5C). Resected DSBs were present in his4::URA3-arg4 in chromatin isolated at
4 h but not in RVS161::URA3-arg4 chromatin (Fig.
5B), thus precluding meaningful comparisons between the two insert loci
in this sample.
Crossing over is reduced in the central cold region.
The
consensus genetic map of chromosome III (45) indicates that
crossovers rarely occur in the genetic interval between CEN3
and PGK1, loci that define the left-hand
(centromere-proximal) half of the central cold region. This low
crossover density (0.08 centimorgan [cM]/kb) is consistent with the
absence of detectable DSBs in this region (Fig. 1 and reference
3). By contrast, the consensus map distance between
the two cold region markers PGK1 and CRY1 is 24 cM (0.6 cM/kb). These two loci define the right-hand
(centromere-distal) half of the cold region. Baudat and Nicolas report
that only 2% of chromosomes suffer DSBs in this region (3).
These two values are inconsistent; if all crossovers in the
PGK1-CRY1 interval were initiated by the DSBs detected by
Baudat and Nicolas, then this interval would be expected to have a
genetic length of only 2 to 4 cM.
One possible explanation for the observed map distance/DSB discrepancy
in the central cold region is that genetic distances in this region are
greater in the consensus map than they are in SK1, the genetic
background used by us and by Baudat and Nicolas. To test this, we
constructed a fine structure genetic genetic map of the
CEN3-MAT interval, using diploid strains heterozygous for
LEU2, the various URA3::arg4 constructs, and
the centromere-linked gene TRP1 (Table
4). We found the genetic distance between
CEN3 and LEU2 to be 8.3 ± 1.0 cM, a
crossover density similar to the average seen across the yeast genome
(0.35 cM/kb versus 0.33 cM/kb [46]) but significantly
greater than the distance given in the consensus genetic map (about 3 cM [44]). Crossovers occurred in the central cold
region at a frequency significantly less than that expected from the
consensus genetic map. For example, we found the genetic distance
between CEN3 and RIM1::URA3, our most centromere-distal marker in the central cold region, to be about 7.5 cM, or 0.12 cM/kb (Table 4; Fig. 6), a
value significantly less than the consensus map distances between
the centromere and PET18 or CRY1, the two
markers on the consensus map closest to RIM1 (about 17 and
25 cM, respectively).

View larger version (25K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 6.
Crossing over within cold region III. For each insert,
genetic distances are presented above the line, and crossover densities
are given below. The location of each URA3-arg4 insert used
for measuring genetic distances, as well as the position of
CEN3, is shown on the chromosome III map.
|
|
The lowest crossover density was seen in the 16-kb interval immediately
to the right of the centromere, between CEN3 and
RVS161::URA3 (0.4 cM, or 0.02 cM/kb). Crossovers between
CEN3 and YCR017c::URA3 were much more
frequent, with 4.2 cM in this 30-kb interval (0.14 cM/kb), and the
crossover density remained relatively constant for larger
CEN3-insert intervals (0.11 cM/kb for
CEN3-YCR026c::URA3; 0.12 cM/kb for
CEN3-RIM1::URA3). Thus, it appears that crossing over is
strongly suppressed only in the most centromere-proximal quarter of the
cold region. Consistent with this conclusion is the observation that
insert-MAT crossover densities were similar for all cold
region inserts examined (0.16 ± 0.014 cM/kb).
General applicability of these data may be limited by an unanticipated
effect on crossing over of the hemizygous URA3-arg4 inserts.
The average genetic distance between CEN3 and MAT
in insert-bearing strains (12.8 ± 0.5 cM) is significantly less
than the distance observed (19 cM) in two isogenic strains with no construct in this interval (Table 4 and Fig. 6). To test the possibility that the sequence heterology introduced by the hemizygous insert is responsible for this loss of crossovers, we measured the
CEN3-MAT genetic distance in a strain with a
MAT::URA3 insert. This insert duplicates the
MAT locus (67) and thus lies outside the
CEN3-MAT genetic interval. The genetic distance between
CEN3 and MAT was 12 cM in these strains as well.
Therefore, the reduction in crossing over seen in CEN3-MAT
is a direct consequence of the presence of an insert in the vicinity of
the interval, rather than of the introduction of heterology.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Meiotic recombination events are not uniformly distributed along
chromosomes (reviewed in reference 36). In S. cerevisiae, meiotic DSBs appear to be clustered into hot regions
and absent from the ends of chromosomes and from internal cold regions
(3, 29, 39, 72). Our experimental approach has allowed us to examine the reasons for this clustering. The recombination reporter construct used as a target contains the same DNA sequence and most
likely adopts the same chromatin structure at each insert location
(reference 67 and this work). In a previous study, we showed that both DSBs and intragenic recombination in this reporter
construct display position effects (67). In the present study, we further examined this phenomenon by inserting the construct at many sites along chromosome III. We found that the factors making
regions hot or cold for DSBs and recombination do act in a way that is
target sequence independent. However, our data also indicate that there
is a subregion inside the central cold region of chromosome III where
breaks are normally absent, but will form if a proper substrate is provided.
What makes the hot regions hot and the cold regions cold?
The
hypothesis that chromatin in cold regions might be closed to access by
DSB-forming complexes or by other factors that cleave DNA in chromatin
does not appear to be true, at least at the level of sensitivity
offered by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis of DNase I and
topoisomerase II digests of chromatin. We found the cold and hot
regions of chromosome III are similarly accessible both to exogenously
added DNase I and to endogenous topoisomerase II, using either of two
inhibitors. In addition, two copies of the URA3-arg4 insert,
one in a hot region and the other in a cold region, display
quantitatively similar patterns and levels of DNase I hypersensitivity
in chromatin isolated from mitotic cells and from meiotic cells before
and during the time of DSB formation. It is therefore unlikely that the
central cold region of chromosome III lacks DSBs because of a general
occlusion of chromatin akin to what is seen at telomeres and in
mating-type cassettes (19, 66). Our results also underscore
previous conclusions that open chromatin is a prerequisite but in
itself is not sufficient for DSB formation (15, 67).
We believe that our data, obtained by in vitro digests of chromatin,
reflect the general accessibility of chromatin in vivo; the conditions
that we used in topoisomerase II studies have been shown in other
organisms to produce cleavage patterns similar to those seen in living
cells (6, 62). However, we cannot exclude the possibility of
the loss during chromatin preparation of nonnucleosomal features of
chromatin, perhaps induced during meiosis, that are responsible for the
absence of DSBs from cold regions.
If the cold region is not cold due to the occlusion of potential DSBs
sites, are general factors acting over the cold and hot regions to
specifically repress or promote DSB formation? Our main result, that
the total frequency of DSBs within inserts is increased in hot regions
and reduced in cold region inserts, would certainly suggest that this
is the case. The total frequency of insert DSBs parallels the frequency
of recombination in the insert, suggesting that in the construct, most
events yielding Arg+ recombinants are initiated by DSBs
formed within insert sequences. However, detailed features of the data
may reflect the presence of local influences. Position effects are not
always the same at DSB-left and DSB-right. This may reflect competition
for DSB-forming factors between DSB-left, DSB-right, and the native DSB
sites present to each side of the insert (16, 67, 71). These
local effects may also reflect the possibility that DSB-left and
DSB-right occupy different positions on a gradient of break-forming
activity, especially at the boundary between hot and cold domains.
Our data point to the existence of hot and cold DSB domains that act in
a local sequence-independent manner but do not directly address the
systems that confer hot and cold properties upon a region. There are
many possible explanations for the existence of these domains,
including features of higher-order chromosome structure such as
differential chromatin compaction or region-specific localization
within the nucleus. The latter might result from the attachment of the
telomeres to the nuclear periphery and the organized movement of
centromeres and telomeres that occur before and during the time of DSB
formation (8, 61). If DSB-forming factors are distributed
nonuniformly throughout the nucleus, these movements might partition
different chromosomal domains to specific nuclear zones, thus creating
hot and cold domains. With regard to this suggestion, it is interesting
that each of the three cold domains on chromosome III is associated
with either a telomere or a centromere. Testing the generality of this
association will require analysis of DSB patterns on other chromosomes
at a greater resolution than is afforded by current pulsed-field
gel-based studies. Alternatively, DSB-forming factors may be loaded
onto chromosomes during premeiotic DNA replication, in a manner similar to that seen for mitotic and meiotic sister chromatid cohesins (63, 65), thus favoring early-replicating regions for DSB formation. Indeed, both chromosome III hot regions contain origins that
fire early in mitotic S phase (3, 55). Moreover, a weak meiotic recombination hot spot is associated with ARS307, an
origin located in the left-arm hot region (54).
What defines the boundaries of the cold and hot regions?
Since
the URA3-arg4 construct reveals the potential of a
chromosomal region to form DSBs, our results can be used to redefine the boundaries of the central cold region. Our data indicate that there
is no precise boundary between the central cold region and hot region
IV. This is in contrast to the sharp boundary seen for DSBs in native
sequences (3). To account for this apparent discrepancy, we
suggest that the centromere-distal part of the central cold region
contains native sequences and/or chromatin structures that are poor
substrates for DSB formation, while the recombination-reporter
construct contains sequences and/or chromatin structures more favorable
for DSB formation. These inserts are therefore able to be cleaved by
the DSB factors present in but normally unable to act, due to a lack of
suitable substrate. If this suggestion is correct, then the actual
central region in which DSBs cannot occur may be significantly shorter
than the 80-kb length suggested by studies of native DSBs.
By contrast, the left-hand boundary of the central cold region is very
steep. Inserts to either side of the centromere (at YCL011c
and at YCR004c) display about a sixfold difference in recombination frequencies and a fourfold difference in DSB frequencies. This is in general agreement with the published DSB map (3), which shows a well-defined boundary between the left-arm hot region and
the central cold region located at or near the centromere. We do not
know whether the centromere itself forms the boundary between these two
regions. An intriguing possible way for the centromere to limit meiotic
recombination is suggested by an examination of Arg+/insert
DSB ratios. The two inserts with the least Arg+/DSB ratio
are those closest to the centromere, at YCR004c and at
RVS161. It was shown previously that CEN3
represses both gene conversion and crossing over in its vicinity
(33, 34). Our data raise the possibility that this
repression comes at a stage after initiation, perhaps because
specialized centromere-specific sister chromatid cohesion structures
(5, 44) channel initiation events toward intersister rather
than interhomolog repair.
What initiates recombination in the central cold region?
Crossing over occurs at significant frequencies in the central cold
region, which is substantially free of DSBs. This discrepancy was first
remarked upon by Baudat and Nicolas, comparing the consensus genetic
map with the level of DSBs detected in this region (3). Although the genetic length of the cold region is significantly less in
our strain background, it is still significantly greater than would be
expected if crossovers were initiated exclusively by the DSBs detected
in this region. An analogous discrepancy was reported by Fan et al.,
who found that mutants eliminating DSBs in the HIS4 promoter
region still retained a significant basal frequency of gene conversion
in the gene (14).
It was suggested that DSBs in the cold region are dispersed at many
sites and thus fall below the level of detection on conventional Southern blots (3). Consistent with this is our observation that the CEN3-MAT genetic distance is 19 cM in insertless
strains but 12 cM in strains with a hemizygous insert. DSBs in a
hemizygous insert cannot contribute to recombinants in flanking
sequences, since there are no corresponding sequences on the homolog
with which to recombine. However, hemizygous inserts might reduce
crossing over in flanking sequences if the DSB sites within the
URA3-arg4 inserts are able to recruit the few DSB forming
factors present in the cold region by a competition mechanism similar
to that previously described (16, 67, 71).
Alternatively, recombination in the cold region might result from
events that initiate outside the region and later move into it, either
by branch migration of a four-stranded junction (23) or by
DNA synthesis-driven bubble migration (40). The 40%
reduction in crossing over conferred by hemizygous inserts might be due to the resulting nonhomology blocking intermediate movement
(52). It is difficult to reconcile this mechanism with the
steep boundary seen between hot and cold regions at or near the
centromere, and also with the fact that similar reductions are seen for
inserts throughout the cold region. We therefore consider it unlikely that events initiated outside the central cold region make a
substantial contribution to crossovers that occur within it.
In conclusion, we believe that the most likely explanation for the
recombination events that occur in the cold region is that they are
initiated by lesions formed inside the cold region, either by DSBs in
the native sequences that are not localized enough to be detected, by
DSBs that are not formed in rad50S mutants, or by lesions
that are not DSBs. The failure to detect breaks in sufficient
quantities to account for the recombination seen in the chromosome III
central cold region remains a significant challenge to the general
applicability of the DSB model as a mechanism to account for all
meiotic recombination.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank E. J. Louis, Y. Watanabe, H. Debrauwère, and
A. Nicolas for sharing unpublished data, Pfizer Inc. for providing CP-115,953, Y. Pommier for VM26, F. Baudat and A. Nicolas for the
YCR098c probe, New England Biolabs for advice on
pulsed-field gel sample preparation, and A. S. H. Goldman, M. Mortin, C. Vinson, and R. Shroff for comments that improved the manuscript.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Bldg. 37 Room
4C03, NIH, 37 Convent Dr. MSC 4255, Bethesda, MD 20892-4255. Phone:
(301) 496-3393. Fax: (301) 402-3095. E-mail:
lichten{at}helix.nih.gov.
 |
REFERENCES |
| 1.
|
Alani, E.,
R. Padmore, and N. Kleckner.
1990.
Analysis of wild-type and rad50 mutants of yeast suggests an intimate relationship between meiotic chromosome synapsis and recombination.
Cell
61:419-436[Medline].
|
| 2.
|
Baker, B. S.,
A. T. Carpenter,
M. S. Esposito,
R. E. Esposito, and L. Sandler.
1976.
The genetic control of meiosis.
Annu. Rev. Genet.
10:53-134[Medline].
|
| 3.
|
Baudat, F., and A. Nicolas.
1997.
Clustering of meiotic double-strand breaks on yeast chromosome III.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
94:5213-5218[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 4.
|
Becker, D. M., and L. Guarente.
1991.
High-efficiency transformation of yeast by electroporation.
Methods Enzymol.
194:182-187[Medline].
|
| 5.
|
Bickel, S. E.,
D. W. Wyman,
W. Y. Miyazaki,
D. P. Moore, and T. L. Orr-Weaver.
1996.
Identification of ORD, a Drosophila protein essential for sister chromatid cohesion.
EMBO J.
15:1451-1459[Medline].
|
| 6.
|
Borde, V., and M. Duguet.
1996.
In vivo topoisomerase II cleavage sites in the ribosomal DNA of Physarum polycephalum.
Biochemistry
35:5787-5795[Medline].
|
| 7.
|
Cao, L.,
E. Alani, and N. Kleckner.
1990.
A pathway for generation and processing of double-strand breaks during meiotic recombination in S. cerevisiae.
Cell
61:1089-1101[Medline].
|
| 8.
|
Chikashige, Y.,
D. Q. Ding,
Y. Imai,
M. Yamamoto,
T. Haraguchi, and Y. Hiraoka.
1997.
Meiotic nuclear reorganization: switching the position of centromeres and telomeres in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe.
EMBO J.
16:193-202[Medline].
|
| 9.
|
Dawson, D. S.,
A. W. Murray, and J. W. Szostak.
1986.
An alternative pathway for meiotic chromosome segregation in yeast.
Science
234:713-717[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 10.
| Debrauwère, H., and A. Nicolas. 1998. Personal communication.
|
| 11.
|
de Massy, B.,
F. Baudat, and A. Nicolas.
1994.
Initiation of recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae haploid meiosis.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
91:11929-11933[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 12.
|
Dernburg, A. F.,
K. McDonald,
G. Moulder,
R. Barstead,
M. Dresser, and A. M. Villeneuve.
1998.
Meiotic recombination in C. elegans initiates by a conserved mechanism and is dispensable for homologous chromosome synapsis.
Cell
94:387-398[Medline].
|
| 13.
|
Elsea, S. H.,
N. Osheroff, and J. L. Nitiss.
1992.
Cytotoxicity of quinolones toward eukaryotic cells. Identification of topoisomerase II as the primary cellular target for the quinolone CP-115,953 in yeast.
J. Biol. Chem.
267:13150-13153[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 14.
|
Fan, Q.,
F. Xu, and T. D. Petes.
1995.
Meiosis-specific double-strand DNA breaks at the HIS4 recombination hot spot in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae: control in cis and trans.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
15:1679-1688[Abstract].
|
| 15.
|
Fan, Q. Q., and T. D. Petes.
1996.
Relationship between nuclease-hypersensitive sites and meiotic recombination hot spot activity at the HIS4 locus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
16:2037-2043[Abstract].
|
| 16.
|
Fan, Q. Q.,
F. Xu,
M. A. White, and T. D. Petes.
1997.
Competition between adjacent meiotic recombination hotspots in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Genetics
145:661-670[Abstract].
|
| 17.
|
Gilbertson, L. A., and F. W. Stahl.
1994.
Initiation of meiotic recombination is independent of interhomologue interactions.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
91:11934-11937[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 18.
|
Goldman, A. S., and M. Lichten.
1996.
The efficiency of meiotic recombination between dispersed sequences in Saccharomyces cerevisiae depends upon their chromosomal location.
Genetics
144:43-55[Abstract].
|
| 19.
|
Gottschling, D. E.
1992.
Telomere-proximal DNA in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is refractory to methyltransferase activity in vivo.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
89:4062-4065[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 20.
|
Goyon, C., and M. Lichten.
1993.
Timing of molecular events in meiosis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: stable heteroduplex DNA is formed late in meiotic prophase.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
13:373-382[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 21.
|
Gross, D. S., and W. T. Garrard.
1988.
Nuclease hypersensitive sites in chromatin.
Annu. Rev. Biochem.
57:159-197[Medline].
|
| 22.
|
Hassold, T.,
M. Merrill,
K. Adkins,
S. Freeman, and S. Sherman.
1995.
Recombination and maternal age-dependent nondisjunction: Molecular studies of trisomy 16.
Am. J. Hum. Genet.
57:867-874[Medline].
|
| 23.
|
Holliday, R.
1964.
A mechanism for gene conversion in fungi.
Genet. Res.
5:282-304.
|
| 24.
|
Kaback, D. B.,
V. Guacci,
D. Barber, and J. W. Mahon.
1992.
Chromosome size-dependent control of meiotic recombination.
Science
256:228-232[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 25.
|
Kane, S. M., and R. Roth.
1974.
Carbohydrate metabolism during ascospore development in yeast.
J. Bacteriol.
118:8-14[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 26.
|
Keeney, S., and N. Kleckner.
1996.
Communication between homologous chromosomes: genetic alterations at a nuclease-hypersensitive site can alter mitotic chromatin structure at that site both in cis and in trans.
Genes Cells
1:475-489[Abstract].
|
| 27.
|
Klapholz, S.,
C. S. Waddell, and R. E. Esposito.
1985.
The role of the SPO11 gene in meiotic recombination in yeast.
Genetics
110:187-216[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 28.
|
Kleckner, N.
1996.
Meiosis: how could it work?
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
93:8167-8174[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 29.
|
Klein, S.,
D. Zenvirth,
V. Dror,
A. B. Barton,
D. B. Kaback, and G. Simchen.
1996.
Patterns of meiotic double-strand breakage on native and artificial yeast chromosomes.
Chromsoma
105:276-284.
|
| 30.
|
Koehler, K. E.,
R. S. Hawley,
S. Sherman, and T. Hassold.
1996.
Recombination and nondisjunction in humans and flies.
Hum. Mol. Genet.
5:1495-1504[Abstract].
|
| 31.
|
Lamb, N. E.,
E. Feingold,
A. Savage,
D. Avramopoulos,
S. Freeman,
Y. Gu,
A. Hallberg,
J. Hersey,
G. Karadima,
D. Pettay,
D. Saker,
J. Shen,
L. Taft,
M. Mikkelsen,
M. B. Petersen,
T. Hassold, and S. L. Sherman.
1997.
Characterization of susceptible chiasma configurations that increase the risk for maternal nondisjunction of chromosome 21.
Hum. Mol. Genet.
6:1391-1399[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 32.
|
Lamb, N. E.,
S. B. Freeman,
A. Savage-Austin,
D. Pettay,
L. Taft,
J. Hersey,
Y. Gu,
J. Shen,
D. Saker,
K. M. May,
D. Avramopoulos,
M. B. Petersen,
A. Hallberg,
M. Mikkelsen,
T. J. Hassold, and S. L. Sherman.
1996.
Susceptible chiasmate configurations of chromosome 21 predispose to non-disjunction in both maternal meiosis I and meiosis II.
Nat. Genet.
14:400-405[Medline].
|
| 33.
|
Lambie, E. J., and G. S. Roeder.
1986.
Repression of meiotic crossing over by a centromere (CEN3) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Genetics
114:769-789[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 34.
|
Lambie, E. J., and G. S. Roeder.
1988.
A yeast centromere acts in cis to inhibit meiotic gene conversion of adjacent sequences.
Cell
52:863-873[Medline].
|
| 35.
|
Lichten, M.,
R. H. Borts, and J. E. Haber.
1987.
Meiotic gene conversion and crossing over between dispersed homologous sequences occurs frequently in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Genetics
115:233-246[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 36.
|
Lichten, M., and A. S. Goldman.
1995.
Meiotic recombination hotspots.
Annu. Rev. Genet.
29:423-444[Medline].
|
| 37.
|
Liu, J.,
T.-C. Wu, and M. Lichten.
1995.
The location and structure of double-strand DNA breaks induced during yeast meiosis: evidence for a covalently linked DNA-protein intermediate.
EMBO J.
14:4599-4608[Medline].
|
| 38.
|
Liu, L. F.
1989.
DNA topoisomerase poisons as antitumor drugs.
Annu. Rev. Biochem.
58:351-375[Medline].
|
| 39.
|
Louis, E.
1998.
Whole chromosome analysis.
Methods Microbiol.
26:15-31.
|
| 40.
|
Malkova, A.,
E. L. Ivanov, and J. E. Haber.
1996.
Double-strand break repair in the absence of RAD51 in yeast: a possible role for break-induced DNA replication.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
93:7131-7136[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 41.
|
McKee, A. H., and N. Kleckner.
1997.
A general method for identifying recessive diploid-specific mutations in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, its application to the isolation of mutants blocked at intermediate stages of meiotic prophase and characterization of a new gene SAE2.
Genetics
146:797-816[Abstract].
|
| 42.
|
McKim, K. S.,
B. L. Green-Marroquin,
J. J. Sekelsky,
G. Chin,
C. Steinberg,
R. Khodosh, and R. S. Hawley.
1998.
Meiotic synapsis in the absence of recombination.
Science
279:876-878[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 43.
|
McKim, K. S., and A. Hayashi-Hagihara.
1998.
mei-W68 in Drosophila melanogaster encodes a Spo11 homolog: evidence that the mechanism for initiating meiotic recombination is conserved.
Genes Dev.
12:2932-2942[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 44.
|
Moore, D. P.,
W. Y. Miyazaki,
J. E. Tomkiel, and T. L. Orr-Weaver.
1994.
Double or nothing: a Drosophila mutation affecting meiotic chromosome segregation in both females and males.
Genetics
136:953-964[Abstract].
|
| 45.
|
Mortimer, R. K.,
C. R. Contopoulou, and J. S. King.
1992.
Genetic and physical maps of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, edition 11.
Yeast
8:817-902[Medline].
|
| 46.
|
Mortimer, R. K., and D. Schild.
1981.
Genetic mapping in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, p. 11-26.
In
J. N. Strathern, E. W. Jones, and J. R. Broach (ed.), The molecular biology of the yeast Saccharomyces: life cycle and inheritance. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.
|
| 47.
|
Nicklas, R. B.
1997.
How cells get the right chromosomes.
Science
275:632-637[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 48.
|
Nicolas, A.
1998.
Relationship between transcription and initiation of meiotic recombination: toward chromatin accessibility.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
95:87-89[Free Full Text].
|
| 49.
|
Ohta, K.,
A. Nicolas,
M. Furuse,
A. Nabetani,
H. Ogawa, and T. Shibata.
1998.
Mutations in the MRE11, RAD50, XRS2, and MRE2 genes alter chromatin configuration at meiotic DNA double-stranded break sites in premeiotic and meiotic cells.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
95:646-651[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 50.
|
Ohta, K.,
T. Shibata, and A. Nicolas.
1994.
Changes in chromatin structure at recombination initiation sites during yeast meiosis.
EMBO J.
13:5754-5763[Medline].
|
| 51.
|
Oliver, S. G., et al.
1992.
The complete DNA sequence of yeast chromosome III.
Nature
357:38-46[Medline].
|
| 52.
|
Panyutin, I. G., and P. Hsieh.
1993.
Formation of a single base mismatch impedes spontaneous DNA branch migration.
J. Mol. Biol.
230:413-424[Medline].
|
| 53.
|
Prinz, S.,
A. Amon, and F. Klein.
1997.
Isolation of COM1, a new gene required to complete meiotic double-strand break-induced recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Genetics
146:781-795[Abstract].
|
| 54.
|
Rattray, A. J., and L. S. Symington.
1993.
Stimulation of meiotic recombination in yeast by an ARS element.
Genetics
134:175-188[Abstract].
|
| 55.
|
Reynolds, A. E.,
R. M. McCarroll,
C. S. Newlon, and W. L. Fangman.
1989.
Time of replication of ARS elements along yeast chromosome III.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
9:4488-4494[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 56.
|
Roeder, G. S.
1997.
Meiotic chromosomes: it takes two to tango.
Genes Dev.
11:2600-2621[Free Full Text].
|
| 57.
|
Roeder, G. S.
1995.
Sex and the single cell: meiosis in yeast.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
92:10450-10456[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 58.
|
Ross, L. O.,
S. Rankin,
M. F. Shuster, and D. S. Dawson.
1996.
Effects of homology, size and exchange on the meiotic segregation of model chromosomes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Genetics
142:79-89[Abstract].
|
| 59.
|
Sambrook, J.,
E. F. Fritsch, and T. Maniatis.
1989.
Molecular cloning: a laboratory manual.
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.
|
| 60.
|
Smith, K. N., and A. Nicolas.
1998.
Recombination at work for meiosis.
Curr. Opin. Genet. Dev.
8:200-211[Medline].
|
| 61.
|
Trelles-Sticken, E.,
J. Loidl, and H. Scherthan.
1999.
Bouquet formation in budding yeast: initiation of recombination is not required for meiotic telomere clustering.
J. Cell Sci.
112:651-658[Abstract].
|
| 62.
|
Udvardy, A., and P. Schedl.
1991.
Chromatin structure, not DNA sequence specificity, is the primary determinant of topoisomerase II sites of action in vivo.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
11:4973-4984[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 63.
|
Uhlmann, F., and K. Nasmyth.
1998.
Cohesion between sister chromatids must be established during DNA replication.
Curr. Biol.
8:1095-1101[Medline].
|
| 64.
|
Wach, A.
1996.
PCR-synthesis of marker cassettes with long flanking homology regions for gene disruptions in S. cerevisiae.
Yeast
12:259-265[Medline].
|
| 65.
| Watanabe, Y., and P. Nurse. 1999. Personal
communication.
|
| 66.
|
Weiss, K., and R. T. Simpson.
1998.
High-resolution structural analysis of chromatin at specific loci: Saccharomyces cerevisiae silent mating type locus HML .
Mol. Cell. Biol.
18:5392-5403[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 67.
|
Wu, T.-C., and M. Lichten.
1995.
Factors that affect the location and frequency of meiosis-induced double-strand breaks in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Genetics
140:55-66[Abstract].
|
| 68.
|
Wu, T.-C., and M. Lichten.
1994.
Meiosis-induced double-strand break sites determined by yeast chromatin structure.
Science
263:515-518[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 69.
|
Wu, T.-C., and M. Lichten.
1993.
Position effects in meiotic recombination, p. 19-36.
In
G. Cooper, F. Haseltine, S. Heyner, and J. Straus (ed.), Meiosis II: contemporary approaches to the study of meiosis. American Academy for the Advancement of Science, Washington, D.C.
|
| 70.
| Wu, T.-C., and M. Lichten. Unpublished
data.
|
| 71.
|
Xu, L., and N. Kleckner.
1995.
Sequence non-specific double-strand breaks and interhomolog interactions prior to double-strand break formation at a meiotic recombination hot spot in yeast.
EMBO J.
14:5115-5128[Medline].
|
| 72.
|
Zenvirth, D.,
T. Arbel,
A. Sherman,
M. Goldway,
S. Klein, and G. Simchen.
1992.
Multiple sites for double-strand breaks in whole meiotic chromosomes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
EMBO J.
11:3441-3447[Medline].
|
Molecular and Cellular Biology, July 1999, p. 4832-4842, Vol. 19, No. 7
0270-7306/99/$04.00+0
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Friberg, U., Rice, W. R.
(2008). Cut Thy Neighbor: Cyclic Birth and Death of Recombination Hotspots via Genetic Conflict. Genetics
179: 2229-2238
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Mell, J. C., Wienholz, B. L., Salem, A., Burgess, S. M.
(2008). Sites of Recombination Are Local Determinants of Meiotic Homolog Pairing in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Genetics
179: 773-784
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Fukuda, T., Kugou, K., Sasanuma, H., Shibata, T., Ohta, K.
(2008). Targeted induction of meiotic double-strand breaks reveals chromosomal domain-dependent regulation of Spo11 and interactions among potential sites of meiotic recombination. Nucleic Acids Res
36: 984-997
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Tsai, C. J., Mets, D. G., Albrecht, M. R., Nix, P., Chan, A., Meyer, B. J.
(2008). Meiotic crossover number and distribution are regulated by a dosage compensation protein that resembles a condensin subunit. Genes Dev.
22: 194-211
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Robine, N., Uematsu, N., Amiot, F., Gidrol, X., Barillot, E., Nicolas, A., Borde, V.
(2007). Genome-Wide Redistribution of Meiotic Double-Strand Breaks in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol. Cell. Biol.
27: 1868-1880
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Sasanuma, H., Murakami, H., Fukuda, T., Shibata, T., Nicolas, A., Ohta, K.
(2007). Meiotic association between Spo11 regulated by Rec102, Rec104 and Rec114. Nucleic Acids Res
35: 1119-1133
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Rockmill, B., Voelkel-Meiman, K., Roeder, G. S.
(2006). Centromere-Proximal Crossovers Are Associated With Precocious Separation of Sister Chromatids During Meiosis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Genetics
174: 1745-1754