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Molecular and Cellular Biology, October 2005, p. 9054-9062, Vol. 25, No. 20
0270-7306/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/MCB.25.20.9054-9062.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Division of Basic Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, 1100 Fairview Ave. North, A1-162, Seattle, Washington 98109,1 Department of Biology, P.O. Box 2032, Niagara University, Lewiston, New York 141092
Received 13 June 2005/ Returned for modification 11 July 2005/ Accepted 22 July 2005
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Recombination does not occur at a uniform frequency throughout the genomes of the organisms examined. Rather, there are sites that recombine at a significantly higher or lower frequency than the genomic average, termed hot spots and cold spots, respectively. Hot spots have been described in organisms as diverse as bacteria and their phages, mice, and humans (9, 26, 30). In the two distantly related yeasts Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe, meiotic hot spots of recombination are sites of programmed double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) made by the Spo11 protein (Rec12 in S. pombe) (11, 26, 31, 33). Spo11 is a meiotically induced protein with amino acid sequence similarity to an archaeal type II topoisomerase, TopoVI. Spo11 homologs are widely conserved in eukaryotes and are essential for meiotic recombination in several diverse organisms (20, 21). Thus, it is likely that programmed DSBs are a universal mechanism for the initiation of meiotic recombination.
Though much progress has been made in elucidating the mechanism of recombination, it is less clear how this process is regulated in eukaryotes. In particular, little is known about the factors controlling the locations of prominent DNA break sites, i.e., hot spots of recombination. In a global analysis of meiotic DSB sites in S. cerevisiae, Gerton et al. (15) found a significant correlation between DSB sites and the local G+C content. When viewed in 5-kb windows, >90% of all DSBs were found within 2.5 kb of regions where the G+C content exceeded the genomic average. The molecular basis of this correlation is not clear. Blumental-Perry et al. (6) reported that DSBs in S. cerevisiae were correlated with a 50-bp degenerate motif termed the common homology region or CoHR. However, a recent test of this hypothesis found no significant association of the CoHR with DSB sites, and deletion of the CoHR at HIS2, one of the hot spots used to identify the CoHR sequence, affected neither the position nor the intensity of meiotic DNA breakage at that site (19).
In prokaryotes, hot spots of recombination are often determined by short DNA sequence motifs. For example, in Escherichia coli a unique eight-base sequence, Chi, is recognized and activated by the RecBCD enzyme at an early step in recombination (30). Chi hot spots are active in other enteric bacteria (24), and short (5- to 7-bp) sequences also appear to be hot spots in the distantly related gram-positive bacteria Bacillus subtilis and Lactococcus lactis. Both of these species contain functional homologs of the RecBCD enzyme, whose activity is regulated by their respective Chi sequences in a manner comparable to that of the E. coli RecBCD enzyme (7, 10). Thus, discrete sequence motifs defining hot spots of recombination may be a common feature of prokaryotes.
The M26 hot spot of S. pombe is the only reported eukaryotic hot spot comparable to the Chi hot spot in that it is defined by a simple sequence motif. This hot spot was first identified as a mutation in the ade6 gene, ade6-M26, that elevated recombination up to 20-fold compared to other ade6 alleles (17). The hot spot results from a single G
T nonsense mutation near the 5' end of ade6 (34). This mutation creates a 7-bp sequence, 5'-ATGACGT-3' (M26 mutation underlined), essential for hot spot activity (28). This sequence is at least part of the binding site for a heterodimeric transcription factor, Atf1-Pcr1, which is also essential for M26 hot spot activity (22, 36). When created by mutation of 1 to 4 bp, the M26 heptamer generates hot spots at multiple positions within the ade6 and ura4 genes (12), and all of those sites tested stimulate the formation of Rec12-dependent meiosis-specific DSBs near the site of the M26 heptamer (31). In addition to M26, Fox et al. (13) showed that a closely related sequence, 5'-TGACGTC/A-3', termed CRE (cyclic AMP response element), is also an Atf1-Pcr1-dependent hot spot at one site within the ade6 gene. M26 and CRE overlap at six of their seven base pairs, differing only at the ends (Fig. 1).
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FIG. 1. Positions of M26 or CRE sites (M26/CRE) tested for meiotic DNA breakage. Site numbers correspond to those described in the text. Chromosomes are drawn to scale, and centromeres are indicated by ovals. Below the chromosomes are definitions of the sites studied here.
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The strains used in this study are listed in Table 1. The ade6 alleles M26, M375, and 469 have been described previously (17, 34). The other ade6 alleles, pcr1::his7+, and atf1::ura4+ were described by Steiner and Smith (32); pat1-114 and rad50S were described by Young et al. (40); h+ mat1P
17::LEU2 was described by Arcangioli and Klar (2). The cds1 alleles contain the following nucleotide substitutions (numbered from the start of the coding sequence): cds1-T11A, A31G (35); cds1-1, G543T (nonsense mutation); cds1-2, C533T; cds1-3, C533T G534T; cds1-4, T192C. All cds1 mutations were generated with a site-directed mutagenesis kit (QuikChange; Stratagene) and, as the template, a plasmid containing a 3.3-kb PstI-SpeI fragment of cds1 (pBS-cds1) (35). Mutations were confirmed by nucleotide sequencing. The mutant plasmids were digested with PstI and SpeI and used for LiCl-mediated transformation (3) of GP4279, containing
cds1::ura4+ (25). After overnight recovery in YEL-5S, linear transformants were selected on NBA plates (0.67% Difco yeast nitrogen base without amino acids) supplemented with uracil, leucine, and 1 mg/ml 5-fluoroorotic acid (32). Homologous integration was confirmed by Southern blot hybridization, and mutations were confirmed by sequencing or by the expected restriction site alteration.
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TABLE 1. Strains used in this study
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Ade+ recombinant frequencies from zygotic and azygotic meioses (see Tables 3 and 4) were determined by random spore analysis as previously described (32). For diploid strains, freshly grown single colonies were used to inoculate 5-ml YEL-5S cultures, which were grown overnight at 32°C. Appropriate dilutions of these cultures were plated onto YEA-5S or YEA-4SG in order to determine the frequency of Ade+ mitotic recombinants prior to sporulation. The frequency of Ade+ cells in these cultures was <50/106 in all cultures tested. One milliliter of each diploid culture was centrifuged; the cells were washed twice with 0.85% NaCl and plated onto SPA supplemented with adenine and/or uracil. After 2 days of incubation at 25°C, spores were treated with Glusulase and ethanol to kill the remaining vegetative cells as previously described (32).
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TABLE 3. The ade6-M26CS hot spot is only partially Pcr1 dependent
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TABLE 4. The ade6-M26CS hot spot is strongly Atf1 dependent
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Meiotic DNA break analysis.
Meiotic DNA breaks were assayed in pat1-114 rad50S strains GP4879, GP4880 (pcr1+), and GP3111 (pcr1
). Meiotic inductions, preparation of genomic DNA, restriction enzyme digestion, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, and Southern blot hybridizations were performed as previously described (31, 40). Under the conditions used, premeiotic DNA replication occurs 2 to 3 h after induction; meiosis-specific DSBs are usually visible by 3.5 to 4 h, and these breaks are not repaired due to the presence of the rad50S allele. Samples were taken at multiple time points after meiotic induction, and DNA was purified in agarose plugs to minimize mechanical breakage. Restriction enzymes were chosen that produced fragments of 8 to 29 kb containing the M26 or CRE sites, and DSBs were assayed by Southern blot hybridization with probes specific to one end of each fragment.
DNA breakage was quantitated with a Molecular Dynamics PhosphorImager. Volume reports were determined for broken and unbroken fragments with the local average background subtracted. After quantitation, blots were stripped by two 15-min washes at 95°C in 0.1x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate)-0.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate and rehybridized with a different probe. Occasionally, a trace amount of radioactivity in the main restriction fragment remained on the blot after this procedure. Thus, for each blot, probes hybridizing to the largest DNA fragment were used first, followed by probes recognizing successively smaller fragments. Any radioactivity remaining from a previous hybridization would not interfere with the results of the next.
Probes for each of the M26/CRE sites in this study were prepared by PCR with primer pairs specific to each of the M26/CRE sites as follows: 1-1, 5'-CGACGTCGACGACAAGAGAGATTT-3' and 5'-GGCATTCTGAATTTCAAACTTTCGCA-3'; 1-2, 5'-TAGCAGCCTCAATCTGAACATCGG-3' and 5'-GTGGGAAGACGATTTAGCGAATGC-3'; 1-3, 5'-TGTCTTGGCATCAGCATACAGTT-3' and 5'-TATGAACTCGCTCAGGGAATGGAG-3'; 1-4, 5'-GAAGCTTCAAAGGATCGAATTGAGTTGTG-3' and 5'-GATAACCTTTCCAAAGACCGCCTTC-3'; 2-1, 5'-AGGAGCTTACGCCGTCTCAAGTAT-3' and 5'-TTCGTGATCTTCTACCATCGCGTC-3'; 2-2, 5'-CAACACGTTATTATGGTAAACCGAACG-3' and 5'-ACGGTCGAGATGAGTACAAAGTCA-3'; 2-3, 5'-GCTCAAGTTCCACCGATTGTGAAG-3' and 5'-GCAAGCGCAGTTTGAGGTCTGTTA-3'; 2-4, 5'-CCCTGCGAAAGTAAATGAAGTGCG-3' and 5'-CCCTCTTCTTGTATGAAGTTGTGGATCA-3'; 2-5, 5'-CCAATAGAAGGGAACTTCATCATAGGC-3' and 5'-GCTCTCATCGTCGTTATGTCGAGT-3'; 2-6, 5'-TTTGAGCCAACTATCGCTGGACG-3' and 5'-GAGAGGAAATCCATTCAGTACCGTTAAA-3'; 2-7, 5'-GCCTAATCAGCAACAATTAGCCCA-3' and 5'-CCGAATTATGGCATTTAGCAAGTAAAGCA-3'; 3-2, 5'-AACAACACCTACCATGTCAGGGTCTC-3' and 5'-TCCGAACGGAAACGCTCAAGAGAA-3'; 3-3, 5'-CACACCAACTGAATATTGTATCCCATCC-3' and 5'-AACGGCATGCTACCAGAAAGT-3'; 3-4, PacI, 5'-TGTGAAAGTGTCTAATGCCTTATCTGA-3' and 5'-GGAAATTAAGACAAGCAAAGCGTGC-3'; 3-4, HaeII, 5'-CCAGCATACACAGCCATTAACCGA-3' and 5'-ACGTCAACTTGGACGGAGGTTATG-3' or 5'-GGCTTGTCCAGATATTACGGCATC-3' and 5'-ACAGTCGACACAAACATCTAAATAAGC-3'; 3-5, 5'-GCTCAAGCGATCCTTCCATCAAAC-3' and 5'-TGATTACTCGCCAATGCTTTCA-3'.
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By Southern blot hybridization, we tested the M26- or CRE-containing genome fragments for meiotic DSBs (Fig. 2; the complete set of uncropped images is in Fig. S1 of the supplemental material). DSBs were observed in 13 of the 15 fragments probed. Nine of the 13 observed break sites were prominent (
1% of the total DNA was broken; Table 2) and often appeared as clusters of breaks spread over regions of up to 2 kb (e.g., site 1-4, Fig. 2). Since approximately 200 kb of the genome was surveyed in our analysis, this corresponds to an average of one prominent break site per
22 kb. This density of breaks appears to be somewhat greater than that observed in previous analyses, where prominent break sites were estimated to occur
25 to 200 kb apart (40). If so, this implies that the presence of M26/CRE is positively correlated with DNA breaks. Of course, a more important consideration is the positions of the break sites relative to the M26/CRE sequence in each fragment. Fifteen DSB sites were found in 15 DNA fragments averaging
14 kb in length (two fragments, 1-1 and 2-4, had two clusters of breaks each; Fig. 2; see Fig. S1 of the supplemental material). Ten of those breaks were
1 kb from the M26/CRE sequence (Table 2; see Fig. S1 of the supplemental material). In any fragment, the probability of a break occurring
1 kb from M26/CRE by chance is 2 kb/14 kb = 0.14, and the probability of
10 of 15 breaks falling at least that close to M26/CRE can be calculated from the binomial distribution to be 4.4 x 106. Thus, most, and perhaps all, of the breaks
1 kb from the M26/CRE sequence likely result from the presence of that motif at those sites.
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FIG. 2. Meiosis-induced DSBs are produced at the M26/CRE motif at several sites in the genome. pcr1+ or pcr1 strains were induced for meiosis, and genomic DNA was purified at the indicated time points. The DNA was digested and analyzed by Southern blot hybridization with probes specific to each of the indicated sites. The predicted sizes in kilobase pairs of the unbroken restriction fragment and of fragments generated by a break at the M26/CRE motif are indicated above each blot. The size of the broken fragment recognized by the probe is shown in boldface type. The positions of broken DNA fragments are indicated by black bars to the right of each gel. DNA size markers in kilobases are shown to the left and right of the gels. The exposure of these markers was sometimes adjusted separately from the rest of the blot for clarity.
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TABLE 2. Meiotic DSBs at M26/CRE sites in wild-type S. pombe
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As noted in the introduction, Gerton et al. (15) also reported a correlation between DSBs in S. cerevisiae and the G+C content in 5-kb windows surrounding the break site. In our more limited survey of break sites, we found a similar correlation, but only in a much smaller window. Viewed in 100-bp windows, 9 of the 10 M26/CRE sites showing breaks were in regions where the G+C content exceeded the genomic average, and 4 of 5 sites showing no detectable breaks were in regions of lower-than-average G+C content. There was also a positive, but weak, quantitative correlation between G+C content and break intensity (linear regression analysis, R2 = 0.30; unpublished observations). These correlations declined as larger windows were considered. Thus, the pattern of nucleotide composition around hot spots in S. cerevisiae noted by Gerton et al. (15) may be similar to but more extensive than that around the active M26/CRE sites in S. pombe.
Partial Pcr1 independence of M26CS hot spot activity. As previously mentioned, the M26 hot spot was first identified by the ade6-M26 mutation (17). The activity of that hot spot is completely dependent on the Atf1-Pcr1 transcription factor. Mutation of pcr1 eliminates detectable breakage at the hot spot (31), and mutation of either atf1 or pcr1 reduces recombination to non-hot spot levels (22). A CRE hot spot created at the same position as the ade6-M26 mutation also showed complete dependence on both Atf1 and Pcr1 (13). Thus, we expected that other M26/CRE sites would have similar requirements for hot spot activity, and DSBs, if they occurred at these sites, would not be observed in strains lacking Pcr1. We were therefore surprised to see substantial Pcr1 independence of breakage at some of the M26/CRE sites whose positions coincided with DSBs (e.g., Fig. 2, sites 1-3, 1-4, and 3-5). In our DSB analysis (Fig. 2), an atf1 mutant was not tested because it cannot be induced for meiosis in pat1-114 (ts) strains (31). Consequently, we used genetic tests for Atf1 and Pcr1 dependence of the M26/CRE sites examined here.
Previous studies have shown that although mutations in atf1 or pcr1 have similar phenotypes, they are not identical. Both mutations result in poor mating and sporulation efficiency, but an atf1 mutation is more deficient in these processes (23; our unpublished observations). Furthermore, Atf1, but not Pcr1, is required for growth at high osmolarity (22, 23). And mutation of pcr1, but not atf1, results in cold-sensitive growth on rich medium (37; our unpublished observations). Thus, both of these polypeptides may also act alone or in conjunction with other protein partners in vivo.
Since many of the DSBs at or near M26/CRE sites were not eliminated in the pcr1 mutant, we tested whether Atf1 and Pcr1 were required for hot spot activity of the M26 consensus sequence (M26CS) at two sites in the ade6 gene (Fig. 3, ade6-3083 and ade6-3070) (32). Both of these hot spots showed substantial activity in the absence of Pcr1: hot spot activity in the pcr1 mutant was significantly reduced, but less than threefold relative to the corresponding pcr1+ strains, and was 10- to 20-fold greater than that of the non-hot spot control alleles (Table 3). The substantial hot spot activity of these sites in the absence of Pcr1 is consistent with the Pcr1-independent breakage observed at or near several of the M26/CRE sites in the genome, as noted above.
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FIG. 3. Positions of ade6 alleles used in crosses (Tables 3 and 4). The two M26CS hot spot alleles, ade6-3083 and -3070 (32), are shown in boldface type above the gene; non-hot spot alleles appear below. ORF, open reading frame.
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As mentioned above, five of the sites tested for meiotic DSBs showed breaks >1 kb from the M26/CRE motif without an accompanying prominent break at the predicted location (sites 1-1, 2-2, 2-4, 2-7, and 3-3, Table 2; Fig. 2; Fig. S1 of the supplemental material). In one case (site 3-3), a cluster of breaks was observed >6 kb from the predicted site, but at none of the five sites was a second M26 or CRE sequence found near the actual break position. Since most meiotic recombination in S. pombe apparently does not require the Atf1 or Pcr1 protein (22; our unpublished observations), the simplest explanation for these breaks is that they are unrelated to the presence of the nearby M26 sequence. However, most of these breaks appeared to be strongly dependent on the Pcr1 protein, for example, sites 1-1, 2-2, and 3-3 (Fig. 2; Fig. S1 of the supplemental material). Since many other meiosis-specific DSBs were seen in the same pcr1 mutant meiosis (for example, at sites 1-3, 1-4, and 3-5, Fig. 2), the lack of DSBs at some sites must, therefore, reflect Pcr1 dependence.
Might M26 stimulate DNA breaks distant from it? Previously, we showed that one M26 hot spot (ade6-3011) is able to stimulate visible breaks up to 1.3 kb distant from it (31). In that case, there were also breaks much closer to M26. Nevertheless, this result demonstrated that M26 can stimulate breaks a considerable distance from it. A similar phenomenon might explain breaks distant from M26 at some of the sites mentioned above, but it does not explain the absence of breakage proximal to M26 at those same sites. Perhaps the DNA near M26 at these sites is protected from cleavage, which occurs instead at the nearest available position. This admittedly unorthodox model would be one means of explaining how hot spots of recombination are preserved through evolutionary time (27): if hot spots of recombination are determined by the DNA sequence at or near the site of breakage, and break repair involves copying from a homolog without the hot spot, they should be lost at high frequency. If, however, the break determinant is located distant from the actual site of breakage, it would be lost at a much lower frequency.
M26 is a recombination hot spot in cds1.
Meiotic DSBs are generally assumed to be hot spots of recombination. In the two organisms in which meiotic DSBs have been observed (S. cerevisiae and S. pombe), strong hot spots of recombination are sites of DNA breakage and vice versa, where tested (e.g., 8, 11, 26, 31, 33). Thus, the DSBs we found in this study are very likely also hot spots of recombination. In order to confirm this assumption, we analyzed one site (3-4, Fig. 1 and 2) more thoroughly because it lies within a well-characterized gene, cds1, encoding a checkpoint protein kinase (14, 25, 35). The cds1 gene contains two M26 motifs; M26ES, which we identified originally in our genome survey, occurs in the third intron (M26ES-I3), and a second site containing all but the last nucleotide of the M26ES motif occurs 343 bp upstream, in the first exon of the gene (M26-E1; Fig. 4). Since either or both of these sites could contribute to the DSBs observed in Fig. 2, we mapped the break sites more precisely in order to determine their positions relative to the two M26 motifs. Figure 5 shows a 6-kb DNA fragment containing cds1 probed from each side for meiotic DSBs. In both analyses, M26ES-I3 fell between two prominent break sites
200 bp apart, making it the likely feature responsible for most, if not all, of the observed breakage. Twin break sites bracketing the M26 sequence were also observed at the ade6-M26 hot spot (31). This pattern of breakage may reflect exclusion of Rec12 over the narrow region of DNA to which Atf1-Pcr1 is actually bound. Thus, while stimulating the cleavage of neighboring DNA, the hot spot sequence itself is protected.
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FIG. 4. The cds1 gene. The positions of two Cds1-inactivating mutations, T11A and 1 (see Materials and Methods) and the two M26 motifs, M26-E1 in exon 1 and M26ES-I3 in intron 3, are shown. Exons and introns are indicated by gray and white boxes, respectively.
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FIG. 5. M26ES lies between two prominent meiotic break sites in cds1. Genomic DNA from meiotically induced cells was digested with HaeII and probed from each end of the resulting 6.0-kb cds1 fragment, as indicated in the schematic diagram below each blot. The inferred positions of both M26 motifs are shown to the right of the blots. The values on the left are molecular sizes in kilobase pairs.
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FIG. 6. M26 is a hot spot of recombination in cds1. Bars show the mean frequency of cds1+ recombinants (± the standard error of the mean) obtained from crosses between strains with the cds1-T11A and cds1-1 mutations (inset) and M26, atf1, and pcr1 mutations as indicated at the bottom. Each cross was performed three times, except for the atf1 mutant, which was performed twice; error bars for that cross show the range of values obtained. M26ES-I3 and M26-E1 are the M26 sites in the third intron and first exon of cds1, respectively (Fig. 4). Mutations in these sites are indicated by allele numbers (2, 3, and 4) at the bottom (see Materials and Methods for allele descriptions).
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40-fold by mutation of atf1 (Fig. 6). This large differential, along with the results in Tables 3 and 4, provides additional evidence that Atf1 can act independently of Pcr1 to promote recombination at M26 or related sites. Conclusions. Here we have shown that the M26/CRE sequence motif defines the locations of multiple meiotic DNA break sites in the wild-type S. pombe genome. At the one break site occurring within a gene, cds1, we also confirmed genetically that M26 acts as a recombination hot spot. Given this result and our current understanding of how recombination is initiated, it is very likely that M26/CRE is also a recombination hot spot at the other break sites we observed. To our knowledge, this is the first example in any eukaryote of a simple sequence motif accurately predicting the locations of recombination hot spots. However, since breaks were not observed at all of the sites examined and since there were large variations in break frequency at the different sites, there are clearly other factors involved in break site selection. These factors could include an influence of nucleotides adjacent to the M26ES sequence (32) or some broader aspect of the local chromatin structure.
Based on the results of our previous analysis of the ade6 gene (32), we restricted our present investigation to genomic sites containing the 9- to 10-bp M26ES and 10-bp CRE sequences, which we hypothesized were most likely to be sites of meiotic DSBs. The majority of these sites showed meiotic DNA breaks. However, this result does not imply that those longer sequences are essential for M26/CRE hot spot activity, and many of the hundreds of shorter versions of the motif could also be hot spots. M26/CRE may be just the first example among a diverse group of simple sequences determining the locations of recombination hot spots. Knowledge of such sequences would allow further predictions about meiotic recombination hot spots, similar to those presented here. This knowledge would facilitate the comparison of genetic and physical maps and aid, for example, the location of human disease genes by linkage studies.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant GM31693 to G.R.S. and a New York State Office of Science, Technology and Academic Research Gen*NY*sis grant to Niagara University. W.W.S. was supported during part of this work by Special Fellowship 3230-05 from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://mcb.asm.org/. ![]()
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