- THIS ARTICLE
-
Abstract
- Full Text (PDF)
- Alert me when this article is cited
- Alert me if a correction is posted
- SERVICES
- Similar articles in this journal
- Similar articles in PubMed
- Alert me to new issues of the journal
- Download to citation manager
- Reprints & Permissions
- CITING ARTICLES
- Citing Articles via HighWire
- Citing Articles via Google Scholar
- GOOGLE SCHOLAR
- Articles by Weng, Y.-s.
- Articles by Nickoloff, J. A.
- Search for Related Content
- PUBMED
- PubMed Citation
- Articles by Weng, Y.-s.
- Articles by Nickoloff, J. A.
Evidence for Independent Mismatch Repair Processing on Opposite Sides of a Double-Strand Break in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Yi-shin Wenga and Jac A. Nickoloffaa Department of Cancer Biology, Harvard University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Corresponding author: Jac A. Nickoloff, Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, jnickoloff{at}salud.unm.edu (E-mail).
Communicating editor: S. JINKS-ROBERTSON
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
Double-strand break (DSB) induced gene conversion in Saccharomyces cerevisiae during meiosis and MAT switching is mediated primarily by mismatch repair of heteroduplex DNA (hDNA). We used nontandem ura3 duplications containing palindromic frameshift insertion mutations near an HO nuclease recognition site to test whether mismatch repair also mediates DSB-induced mitotic gene conversion at a non-MAT locus. Palindromic insertions included in hDNA are expected to produce a stem-loop mismatch, escape repair, and segregate to produce a sectored (Ura+/-) colony. If conversion occurs by gap repair, the insertion should be removed on both strands, and converted colonies will not be sectored. For both a 14-bp palindrome, and a 37-bp near-palindrome, ~75% of recombinant colonies were sectored, indicating that most DSB-induced mitotic gene conversion involves mismatch repair of hDNA. We also investigated mismatch repair of well-repaired markers flanking an unrepaired palindrome. As seen in previous studies, these additional markers increased loop repair (likely reflecting corepair). Among sectored products, few had additional segregating markers, indicating that the lack of repair at one marker is not associated with inefficient repair at nearby markers. Clear evidence was obtained for low levels of short tract mismatch repair. As seen with full gene conversions, donor alleles in sectored products were not altered. Markers on the same side of the DSB as the palindrome were involved in hDNA less often among sectored products than nonsectored products, but markers on the opposite side of the DSB showed similar hDNA involvement among both product classes. These results can be explained in terms of corepair, and they suggest that mismatch repair on opposite sides of a DSB involves distinct repair tracts.
GENE conversion is the nonreciprocal transfer of information from a DNA duplex to a homologous duplex, a process that has been widely studied in yeast (reviewed in ![]()
Two types of models have been proposed to explain the relative frequencies of gene conversion and PMS and the mechanism(s) underlying these events. One type proposes that gene conversion results from correction of mismatches in hDNA intermediates, with PMS reflecting mismatch segregation (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
In both mitotic and meiotic cells, nearly all conversion tracts are continuous (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Plasmids:
Standard techniques were used to construct plasmids (![]()
5'Hleu is a pUC19 derivative with ura3 and LEU2 (J. W. CHO and J. A. NICKOLOFF, unpublished results). This plasmid contains ura3 with nine phenotypically silent RFLP markers and a 24-bp HO site at a natural NcoI site at position 432 (HO432) (![]()
![]()
Yeast strains:
Cells were cultured as described previously (![]()
![]()
![]()
1, and trp1-
1 (![]()
|
Recombination assays:
Two-day old colonies (Ura- Leu+) of YW14-409 and YW37-409 were grown in 1.5 ml of rich medium with 2% glycerol (YPGly) for one day and then transferred to 1.5 ml of rich medium with 5% galactose (YPGal5) for 3 hours. A high concentration of galactose was used to induce HO rapidly, but a minimal induction time period was used to reduce the probability that recombinant cells would divide before plating as this would reduce the apparent sector rate. Cells were plated at a low density to reduce coplating artifacts (~100200 per plate) on nonselective medium (YPD or LB-Ura; see below) and grown for 3 days. For colonies on YPD, Ura+ colonies and sectored Ura+/- colonies were identified by replica-plating to uracil omission medium. LB-Ura medium is identical to standard uracil omission medium except that it contains 3.4 g/liter yeast extract, 6.8 g/liter bacto-tryptone, and 3.4 g/liter NaCl. LB-Ura contains enough uracil to support growth of Ura- yeast, but allows the Ura phenotype to be determined visually in ade2 (red) mutants (![]()
Sectored product analysis:
Conversion tracts, and segregated hybrid DNA regions in sectored products of strain YW14-409R were characterized by mapping both alleles from Ura+ and Ura- sectors. This physical analysis was performed only on sectored colonies in which both sectors were Leu+, as these were constrained to arise by gene conversion (Ura+/- sectors can also result from unequal sister chromatid exchange and other types of events, but these yield colonies with at least one Leu- sector; see RESULTS). Because physical analysis was only performed on sectored colonies, and because sectored colonies were rare in strain YW14-409R (<1 per plate) the two pairs of ura3 alleles in any sectored colony were assured of being derived from a single recombinant. Both ura3 alleles from each Ura+ and Ura- sector were independently rescued as follows. Upstream alleles of all strains were excised from genomic DNA as 7.4-kbp BamHI fragments, and downstream alleles as 6.1-kbp HindIII fragments in strain YW14-409R (Figure 1B) and as 6.1-kbp XmaI fragments in strains YW14-409 and YW37-409, each linked to pUC19 (Figure 1A). Fragments were circularized using T4 DNA ligase, and electroporated into E. coli strain HB101 as described (![]()
![]()
| RESULTS |
|---|
Experimental strategy:
To determine whether general, DSB-induced gene conversion is mediated by gap or hDNA repair, we constructed strains with nontandem ura3 duplications having perfect or near perfect palindromes 23 bp from an HO site. DSBs can be delivered to HO sites in vivo, thus providing a defined recombination initiation site (Figure 1). We reasoned that if DSB-induced gene conversion involves even short double-stranded gaps, the palindrome would frequently be included in gaps extending from the nearby HO site, and Ura+ recombinants would usually be nonsectored. However, if conversion proceeds by hDNA repair, as seen in meiosis and during MAT switching (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
|
DSB-induced recombination between these ura3 direct repeats can produce a variety of products including full or half gene conversions (Ura+ or Ura+/-) in which both ura3 repeats and LEU2 are retained (Leu+ or Leu+/+) or that are associated with a deletion of one ura3 repeat and LEU2 (Leu- or Leu-/-). Deletions may reflect either crossover or single-strand annealing (SSA) events. Also expected were unequal sister chromatid exchange events (which produce a colony with a Leu+ triplication sector and a Leu- deletion sector). If recombinants are identified using selective medium, gene conversions and triplications yield identical Ura+ Leu+ phenotypes, but can be distinguished if genomic DNA is analyzed. Deletions arising by crossing-over, SSA, or unequal exchange are indistinguishable phenotypically (all are Leu-) and genotypically. The nonselective conditions used in this study allow sectored gene conversion products (Ura+/- Leu+/+) to be easily distinguished from other types of Ura+/- sectored products, such as triplication or deletion events resulting from unequal sister chromatid exchange (Ura+/- Leu-/+ and Ura+/- Leu+/-) (Figure 2).
|
Distribution of recombinant products:
The phenotype distribution for DSB-induced recombinants of strain YW14-409 is shown in Table 1. Ura+/- Leu-/- deletion products appeared most frequently; these may arise by loop segregation during conversion events associated with a crossover or an SSA event, or from conversion of only one sister chromatid in G2 cells, although evidence presented below argues against the latter mechanism in the majority of cases. Leu+/+ gene conversion (non-deletion) products were less frequent than deletions (Leu-/-), consistent with studies using related strains (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Most DSB-induced mitotic gene conversion is mediated by hDNA repair:
Among YW14-409 and YW37-409 products that remained Leu+, ~87% were sectored Ura+/-. To confirm that these arose via segregation of a palindromic mismatch, and not from conversion of only one sister chromatid in G2, we analyzed Ura- sectors from strain YW14-409. If such sectors arose from conversion of only one sister chromatid in G2 cells, they would retain the HO site and would recombine at high frequency upon growth in medium with galactose. Patch recombination assays (see MATERIALS AND METHODS) on 17 Ura- sectors from Ura+/- Leu+/+ products showed that 4 retained an HO site. Therefore, the majority of the Ura+/- Leu+/+ sectors reflect the segregation of the palindromic frameshift mutation in hDNA. Because a significant fraction of events occur in G2 (discussed above), these data suggest that the majority G2 events involve cleavage of HO sites in both sister chromatids; products with quarter-sectors were apparent on LB-ura medium, but these were ~10-fold less frequent than half-sectors, further supporting this idea. Physical analysis of 22 Ura+/- Leu+/+ sectored products from the related strain YW14-409R (see below) indicated that none resulted from conversion of only one sister chromatid in G2 cells, further supporting the idea that the most DSB-induced mitotic gene conversion occurs via hDNA repair. Thus, ~90% of Ura+/- Leu+/+ colonies (35 of 39 from these two strains) resulted from palindrome segregation, giving a segregation rate of ~75%. The ~25% nonsectored colonies might have arisen by gap repair, residual mismatch repair and/or loop segregation prior to plating (see DISCUSSION). By ruling out gap repair for most DSB-induced gene conversions in our system, this system can be used to address specific questions about mismatch repair in recombination intermediates.
Donor alleles are unchanged whether or not mismatches are repaired:
Studies have demonstrated that spontaneous and DSB-induced gene conversion is completely nonreciprocal, i.e., donor loci are not altered (![]()
Markers were scored in both ura3 alleles from Ura+ and Ura- sectors in 22 gene conversion products. Since each sector receives one DNA strand from each half of a recombination intermediate, this analysis provided information about all four participating strands of these mitotic events (two strands each from donor and recipient alleles). The unbroken X764 allele retained its parental configuration in all 22 products. Complete nonreciprocality was also seen in nonsectored intrachromosomal gene conversion products in which 9 RFLP markers were scored (J. W. CHO and J. A. NICKOLOFF, unpublished results). Thus, donor alleles remain unchanged whether or not all markers in hDNA are repaired.
Additional markers reduce loop segregation:
The additional markers in YW14-409R (relative to YW14-409) reduced Ura+/- sectoring from 87% to 5% among Leu+ products (Table 1). Although different HO induction times used for strains with and without silent markers preclude direct comparison of sector rates in the two types of strains, limited analysis of YW14-409R sector rates with the shorter (3 hr) induction time indicated that the silent markers reduce Ura+/- sectoring by more than 10-fold (data not shown). Increased loop repair (reduced sectoring) likely reflects the corepair of the loop and nearby well-repaired silent markers, a well-known phenomenon in yeast (reviewed in ![]()
Mismatches adjacent to an unrepaired palindromic loop mismatch are repaired efficiently:
The sectored products of strain YW14-409R can be used to examine mismatch repair of markers near an unrepaired palindromic loop mismatch. As mentioned above, the X764 donor allele was unchanged in both Ura+ and Ura- sectors in all 22 products and therefore remained Ura-. Conversion and segregation patterns in the recipient alleles (which suffered DSBs) are summarized in Figure 3. As expected, recipient alleles of Ura+ sectors lost both frameshift mutations (the HO site and the palindrome). The HO site was also absent in Ura- sectors in all 22 recipient alleles. Thus, the HO site was completely converted in all 22 products. We also expected that the palindrome would be present in recipient alleles in Ura- sectors because sectoring was likely to result from loop segregation, and this was true for 21 of 22 products. In the single exception, both the loop and HO site converted, but hDNA extended to X764, which escaped repair (Figure 3, type 9).
|
Among these products, hybrid DNA was usually more extensive than the minimum required to produce a sectored colony. This minimum is represented by the five examples of product type 1, in which only the region between the HO site and the palindrome insertion may have been included in hybrid DNA. The silent RFLPs are efficiently repaired in standard conversion assays (J. W. CHO and J. A. NICKOLOFF, unpublished results). Among the 17 products known to have arisen from intermediates with silent RFLPs in hDNA (types 29), 14 showed no evidence of silent marker segregation (types 26), indicating that these markers are efficiently repaired even when the nearby loop escapes repair. These 17 products had at least 32 silent markers in hDNA, 22 of which were repaired. This 69% repair efficiency is likely an underestimate as repair that restores a marker is not detected. Short tract repair was evident in two products. The type 6 product had a discontinuity due to restoration of Stu463 and conversion of Bgl565. The discontinuity in the Ura- sector of the type 2 product resulted from segregation of the loop rather than repair. However, the conversion of the Nsi304 site in this product adjacent to the unrepaired loop is further evidence for short tract repair.
Of the three products in which silent markers escaped repair (types 79), two showed a complete lack of mismatch repair. Note that conversion of the HO site does not involve mismatch repair; instead, the nonhomologous ends produce unpaired single-stranded tails upon invasion, and these are thought to be removed by Rad1/10p endonuclease (![]()
Differential involvement of markers in hDNA on opposite sides of the DSB:
Previously, we performed plasmid x chromosome and intrachromosomal crosses with identical ura3 alleles as in YW14-409R except they lacked the palindrome. Among Ura+ products from these crosses, markers 5' of the DSB converted significantly more often than equidistant 3' markers (![]()
![]()
![]()
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Meiotic conversion occurs at relatively high frequencies (a few percent or more), which allows recombinants to be identified without selection. This facilitates the analysis of all four strands involved in a single meiotic recombination event. In contrast, spontaneous conversion in mitotic cells occurs about 1000-fold less often than in meiotic cells, and selection strategies are typically required to identify events that produce functional alleles. Selection can conceal certain types of recombinant events. For example, selection for Ura+ products can make some unequal sister chromatid exchange events appear as deletions. By using HO nuclease to stimulate mitotic recombination at high frequencies, selection can be avoided, and information can be gained for all four strands participating in a single mitotic event. In meiosis, there are eight strands that can interact, but only rarely are more than four involved. The haploid mitotic system described here shows some similarity to the meiotic situation, but with different topological features. In G1 cells there is only one copy of each chromosome and only two copies of the alleles under study; thus interactions involve both available alleles. In G2 cells, most interactions are still likely to involve only two of the four copies, similar to meiosis. However, in meiotic cells all alleles are unlinked whereas in haploid mitotic cells, interacting partners are always linked in G1 cells (intrachromosomal events), while in G2 cells they may be linked or unlinked (sister chromatids). In mitosis, interactions typically occur between sisters rather than homologs (![]()
![]()
Most DSB-induced mitotic gene conversion is mediated by hDNA mismatch repair:
DSB-induced conversion during meiosis and MAT switching involves hDNA repair and our study confirms this for general mitotic DSB-induced conversion. Broken alleles are preferentially converted and conversion tracts are usually continuous (reviewed in ref. ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
In the absence of other markers, we observed about 25% conversion of the palindrome. Despite our efforts to prevent cell division of recombinants prior to plating, it is possible that some of the apparent palindrome conversions seen here were in fact segregation events. However, we believe that this is not the case because similar conversion rates are seen in meiosis with palindromes, and with point mutations in mismatch repair-deficient pms, msh, or mlh mutants (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Mismatch repair in the vicinity of an unrepaired loop mismatch:
The analysis of tract structures in sectored products showed that nearly 80% had hDNA extending across one or more silent markers, and more than 70% had hDNA on both sides of the DSB. These are minimum values because restoration repair effectively hides hDNA. Studies are in progress in mismatch repair mutants to more accurately identify the extent of hDNA. The amount of "hidden" hDNA may be significant because the majority of silent markers were repaired, despite their proximity to an unrepaired loop mismatch. We did observe segregation of silent markers at a (maximum) rate of 31%, which is about 10-fold higher (P = 0.001) than that seen in gene conversion products of a related intrachromosomal cross lacking the palindrome (J. W. CHO and J. A. NICKOLOFF, unpublished results).
A marker might escape repair due to a total or partial lack of repair. Partial repair could reflect the termination of a long repair tract prior to reaching a marker, or short tract repair acting individually on some, but not all markers. Most conversion tracts are continuous (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Evidence for rare, short mismatch repair tracts:
Discontinuous tracts, which arise at low frequencies in both mitotic and meiotic cells, can result from either short tract repair or partial repair. Although short tract repair systems are known in bacteria (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Independent mismatch repair processing on opposites sides of a DSB:
Despite selecting for events that extended 5' of the DSB (toward the palindrome), silent markers 5' of the DSB were converted (or segregated) less often than equidistant markers 3' of the DSB. These results are opposite of previous results of related plasmid x chromosome and intrachromosomal crosses that lacked the palindrome (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
As discussed above, our data and those of others are inconsistent with DSBs stimulating conversion in a double-strand gap. ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
|
Although casual inspection of the recombination intermediate in Figure 5F might suggest the possibility of independent mismatch repair processing on either side of the DSB, this structure is better viewed as having a single region of hDNA; it is therefore likely that mismatch repair initiated on either side of the DSB would process the entire hDNA region in a single repair tract, which is not consistent with our data. Furthermore, because donor information occurs on complementary strands on opposite sides of the DSB, long repair tracts (as seen by ![]()
![]()
![]()
130 bp). Thus, the model shown in Figure 5, EF does not fully explain the available evidence.
In Figure 6 are shown two versions of a DSB repair model in which two physically separated regions of hDNA are formed on either side of the DSB; consequently, these regions will be processed by independent mismatch repair tracts. The first (Figure 6, AE) is a noncrossover version of a model proposed by GILBERTSON and STAHL (see Figure 6 in ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
|
The model shown in Figure 6, A'D' suggests that only one end invades a homolog; however, these same steps can be invoked in a symmetric fashion in a two-ended invasion model that also predicts independent mismatch repair tracts on opposite sides of the DSB, and yields the same products shown in Figure 6E (not shown). In these dual mismatch repair tract models, products are shown with bidirectional tracts. However, unidirectional tracts can arise if hDNA either does not form on one side of the DSB (i.e., no branch migration), or by appropriate mismatch repair processing. In a cross that lacked the palindrome, 42% of intrachromosomal conversion tracts were bidirectional (J. W. CHO and J. A. NICKOLOFF, unpublished results). In contrast, among products in which the palindrome segregated, there were significantly more bidirectional tracts (73%; P = 0.01), possibly reflecting more frequent two-ended invasions. If sectored products only appear when hDNA on the 5' side of the DSB is limited and includes only the palindrome, as argued above, such intermediates may be stabilized by a second invasion on the 3' side of the DSB. This idea is consistent with the significantly higher level of involvement of the 3' Stu463 marker among sectored products (73%) than seen previously among conversion products from a cross lacking the palindrome (47%; P < 0.03). Conversion of Stu463 was slightly higher among sectored than nonsectored products of YW14-409R (Figure 4). If such effects are found to be general, it would suggest that successful recombination requires intermediates to be stabilized by a minimum length of hybrid DNA.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank JENNIFER W. CHO and DOUG SWEETSER for technical assistance, and RICHARD KOLODNER, FRED WINSTON, GERRY SMITH, and STEPHANIE RUBY for helpful comments. This research was supported by grant CA55302 to J.A.N. from the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health.
Manuscript received August 8, 1997; Accepted for publication September 26, 1997.
| LITERATURE CITED |
|---|
AGUILERA, A. and H. L. KLEIN, 1989 Yeast intrachromosomal recombination: long gene conversion tracts are preferentially associated with reciprocal exchange and require the RAD1 and RAD3 gene products. Genetics 123:683-694[Abstract].
AHN, B.-Y. and D. M. LIVINGSTON, 1986 Mitotic gene conversion lengths, coconversion patterns, and the incidence of reciprocal recombination in a Saccharomyces cerevisiae plasmid system. Mol. Cell. Biol. 6:3685-3693
ALANI, E., 1996 The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Msh2 and Msh6 proteins form a complex that specifically binds to duplex oligonucleotides containing mismatched DNA base pairs. Mol. Cell. Biol. 16:5604-5615[Abstract].
ALANI, E., N.-W. CHI, and R. D. KOLODNER, 1995 The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Msh2 protein specifically binds to duplex oligonucleotides containing mismatched DNA base pairs and insertions. Genes Dev. 9:234-247[Abstract].
BELMAAZA, A. and P. CHARTRAND, 1994 One-sided invasion events in homologous recombination at double-strand breaks. Mutat. Res. 314:199-208[Medline].
BIANCHI, M. E. and C. M. RADDING, 1983 Insertions, deletions and mismatches in heteroduplex DNA made by recA protein. Cell 35:511-520[Medline].
BORTS, R. H. and J. E. HABER, 1987 Meiotic recombination in yeast: alteration by multiple heterozygosities. Science 237:1459-1465
BORTS, R. H. and J. E. HABER, 1989 Length and distribution of meiotic gene conversion tracts and crossovers in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. Genetics 123:69-80[Abstract].
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].
CROUSE, G. F., 1997 Mismatch repair systems in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, in DNA Damage and Repair, edited by J. A. Nickoloff and M. F. Hoekstra. Humana Press, Totowa, NJ in press.
DE MASSY, B., V. ROCCO, and A. NICOLAS, 1995 The nucleotide mapping of DNA double-strand breaks at the CYS3 initiation site of meiotic recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. EMBO J. 14:4589-4598[Medline].
DETLOFF, P. and T. D. PETES, 1992 Measurements of excision repair tracts formed during meiotic recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. Mol. Cell. Biol. 12:1805-1814
DETLOFF, P., M. A. WHITE, and T. D. PETES, 1992 Analysis of a gene conversion gradient at the HIS4 locus in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. Genetics 132:113-123[Abstract].
ESPOSITO, M. S., 1978 Evidence that spontaneous mitotic recombination occurs at the two-strand stage. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 75:4436-4440
ESPOSITO, M. S., R. M. RAMIREZ, and C. V. BRUSCHI, 1994 Recombina-tors, recombinases and recombination genes of yeasts. Curr. Genet. 25:1-11[Medline].
FISHMAN-LOBELL, J. and J. E. HABER, 1992 Removal of nonhomologous DNA ends in double-strand break recombination: the role of the yeast ultraviolet repair gene RAD1.. Science 258:480-484
GALLINARI, P., P. NEDDERMANN, and J. JIRICNY, 1997 Short patch mismatch repair in mammalian cells, in DNA Damage and Repair, edited by J. A. Nickoloff and M. F. Hoekstra. Humana Press, Totowa, NJ in press.
GILBERTSON, L. A. and F. W. STAHL, 1996 A test of the double-strand break repair model for meiotic recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. Genetics 144:27-41[Abstract].
GUNN, L., J. WHELDEN and J. A. NICKOLOFF, 1995 Transfer of episomal and integrated plasmids from Saccharomyces cerevisiae to Escherichia coli by electroporation, pp. 5566 in Electroporation Protocols for Microorganisms, edited by J. A. NICKOLOFF. Humana Press, Totowa, NJ.
HABER, J. E., B. L. RAY, J. M. KOLB, and C. I. WHITE, 1993 Rapid kinetics of mismatch repair of heteroduplex DNA that is formed during recombination in yeast. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 90:3363-3367
HOLBECK, S. L. and G. R. SMITH, 1992 Chi enhances heteroduplex DNA levels during recombination. Genetics 132:879-891[Abstract].
HOLLIDAY, R., 1964 A mechanism for gene conversion in fungi. Genet. Res. 5:282-304.
JUDD, S. R. and T. D. PETES, 1988 Physical lengths of meiotic and mitotic gene conversion tracts in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. Genetics 118:401-410[Abstract].
KADYK, L. C. and L. H. HARTWELL, 1992 Sister chromatids are preferred over homologs as substrates for recombinational repair in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. Genetics 132:387-402[Abstract].
KIRKPATRICK, D. T. and T. D. PETES, 1997 Repair of DNA loops involves DNA-mismatch and nucleotide-excision repair proteins. Nature 387:929-931[Medline].
LICHTEN, M. and M. S. FOX, 1984 Evidence for inclusion of regions of nonhomology in heteroduplex DNA products of bacteriophage
recombination. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 81:7180-7184
LICHTEN, M., C. GOYON, N. P. SCHULTES, D. TRECO, and J. W. SZOSTAK et al., 1990 Detection of heteroduplex DNA molecules among the products of Saccharomyces cerevisiae meiosis. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 87:7653-7657
LIEB, M., 1991 Spontaneous mutation at a 5-methylcytosine hotspot is prevented by very short patch (VSP) mismatch repair. Genetics 128:23-27[Abstract].
LOVETT, S. T., P. T. DRAPKIN, V. A. SUTERA, JR., and T. J. GLUCKMAN-PESKIND, 1993 A sister-strand exchange mechanism for recA-independent deletion of repeated DNA sequences in Escherichia coli.. Genetics 135:631-642[Abstract].
MANIVASAKAM, P., S. M. ROSENBERG, and P. J. HASTINGS, 1996 Poorly repaired mismatches in heteroduplex DNA are hyper-recombinagenic in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. Genetics 142:407-416[Abstract].
MCGILL, C., B. SHAFER, and J. STRATHERN, 1989 Coconversion of flanking sequences with homothallic switching. Cell 57:459-467[Medline].
MESELSON, M. and C. M. RADDING, 1975 A general model for genetic recombination. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 72:358-361
MODRICH, P., 1991 Mechanisms and biological effects of mismatch repair. Annu. Rev. Genet. 25:229-253[Medline].
MOORE, C. W., D. M. HAMPSEY, J. F. ERNST, and F. SHERMAN, 1988 Differential mismatch repair can explain the disproportionalities between physical distances and recombination frequencies of cyc1 mutations in yeast. Genetics 119:21-34[Abstract].
NAG, D. K. and T. D. PETES, 1990 Meiotic recombination between dispersed repeated genes is associated with heteroduplex formation. Mol. Cell. Biol. 10:4420-4423
NAG, D. K. and T. D. PETES, 1991 Seven-base-pair inverted repeats in DNA form stable hairpins in vivo in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. Genetics 129:669-673[Abstract].
NAG, D. K. and T. D. PETES, 1993 Physical detection of heteroduplexes during meiotic recombination in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. Mol. Cell. Biol. 13:2324-2331
NAG, D. K., M. A. WHITE, and T. D. PETES, 1989 Palindromic sequences in heteroduplex DNA inhibit mismatch repair in yeast. Nature 340:318-320[Medline].
NASSIF, N., J. PENNY, S. PAL, W. R. ENGELS, and G. B. GLOOR, 1994 Efficient copying of nonhomologous sequences from ectopic sites via P-element-induced gap repair. Mol. Cell. Biol. 14:1613-1625
NEDDERMANN, P. and J. JIRICNY, 1994 Efficient removal of uracil from G-U mispairs by the mismatch-specific thymine DNA glycosylase from HeLa cells. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91:1642-1646
NEGRITTO, M. T., X. WU, T. KUO, S. CHU, and A. M. BAILIS, 1997 Influence of DNA sequence identity on efficiency of targeted gene replacement. Mol. Cell. Biol. 17:278-286[Abstract].
NELSON, H. H., D. B. SWEETSER, and J. A. NICKOLOFF, 1996 Effects of terminal nonhomology and homeology on double-strand break-induced gene conversion tract directionality. Mol. Cell. Biol. 16:2951-2957[Abstract].
NICKOLOFF, J. A., E. Y. C. CHEN, and F. HEFFRON, 1986 A 24-base-pair sequence from the MAT locus stimulates intergenic recombination in yeast. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83:7831-7835





