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High Frequency Intragenic Recombination During Macronuclear Development in Tetrahymena thermophila Restores the Wild-type SerH1 Gene
J. C. Deaka and F. P. Doerderaa Department of Biology, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, Ohio 44115
Corresponding author: F. P. Doerder, Department of Biology, Cleveland State University, 1983 E 24th St., Cleveland, OH 44115, doerder{at}biology.csuohio.edu (E-mail).
Communicating editor: S. L. ALLEN
| ABSTRACT |
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Macronuclear development in ciliates is characterized by extensive rearrangement of genetic material, including sequence elimination, chromosome fragmentation and telomere addition. Intragenic recombination is a relatively rare, but evolutionarily important phenomenon occurring in mitosis and meiosis in a wide variety of organisms. Here, we show that high frequency intragenic recombination, on the order of 30%, occurs in the developing amitotic macronucleus of the ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila. Such recombination, occurring between two nonsense transition mutations separated by 726 nucleotides, reproducibly restores wild-type expression of the SerH1 surface protein gene, thus mimicking complementation in trans heterozygotes. Recombination must be considered a potentially important aspect of macronuclear development, producing gene combinations not present in the germinal micronucleus.
IN the ciliate protist Tetrahymena thermophila the somatic macronucleus, which controls the phenotype, is a rearranged derivative of the diploid, germinal micronucleus. The rearrangement, which occurs during macronuclear development at conjugation, involves DNA sequence elimination, chromosome fragmentation, de novo addition of telomeres and differential gene amplification (reviewed in ![]()
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Rare intragenic recombination has been found for the highly amplified rDNA genes (![]()
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The SerH1 gene encodes the H1 cell surface glycoprotein (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Strains:
Inbred T. thermophila strains A (homozygous SerH1) and B2 (homozygous SerH2) were originally obtained from Dr. D. L. NANNEY at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; the three mating types of strain A were in their 22nd generation of inbreeding, whereas the single mating type of B2 was in its third generation. Mutant cell lines H1-1 and H1-2 (homozygous SerH1-1 and SerH1-2, respectively) were obtained following mutagenesis with N-methyl-N'-nitro-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) (![]()
Western blot and immunofluorescence:
Cellular protein isolation, electrophoresis and blotting procedures were as described (![]()
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Northern blot:
Isolation of cellular RNA, electrophoresis and blotting were done as described (![]()
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Southern blot:
DNA was isolated as described (![]()
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RT-PCR:
RNA was isolated as described (![]()
PCR-end labeling RFLP:
Polymerase chain reactions were performed on 0.5 µg total cellular DNA with primers H3AT and RE. RE (5'-GGAATTCAACCAATTGATCAATTTAC-3') is complementary to the 3' flanking region of SerH1 and SerH3. PCR fragments were digested with HaeIII and XbaI and isolated from a 2% low gelling temperature agarose gel (20 cm long and run overnight at low voltage to maximize resolution) as described (![]()
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PCR amplification of micronuclear SerH1 genes:
Heterokaryons containing wild-type or mutant SerH1 genes in the micronucleus and SerH2 in the macronucleus were constructed by crossing strains A, H1-1 and H1-2 to a descendant of strain B2 capable of genomic exclusion (![]()
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| RESULTS |
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Restoration of H1 expression during macronuclear development:
In the original description of the H1-1 and H1-2 mutants (![]()
Genetic evidence for recombination:
In T. thermophila, macronuclear assortment appears to occur for all macronuclear genetic markers (![]()
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In both the stable assortees and the unassorted heterozygotes, expression of H1 mimics that of wild type. The H1 protein migrates on SDS-PAGE with an Mr of 52 kD (![]()
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Molecular evidence for recombination:
With the same procedure used to clone the wild-type SerH1 allele (![]()
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Three lines of molecular evidence verify that H1 expression in SerH1-1/SerH1-2 heterozygotes is due to intragenic recombination. First, the results of Southern blot analysis of wild-type and mutant DNA probed with a SerH1 fragment spanning the diagnostic (SerH1-1) HaeIII restriction site (Figure 3) are consistent with recombination. The H1-1 DNA yielded a single (expected) 7.3 kb HaeIII/XbaI fragment, thus eliminating the possibility of expression from a cryptic wild-type H1 gene. The H1-2 and wild-type strains contained the HaeIII site, yielding expected fragments of 6 kb and 1258 bp. Significantly, only the wild-type RFLP pattern was detected in the H1 assortee (lane 4) while both restriction patterns were detected in the unassorted heterozygote from which the assortee was isolated (lane 5). A PCR based RFLP analysis which included digestion with Pfl MI (diagnostic of H1-2) yielded identical conclusions (data not shown).
Second, both wild-type and double-mutant transcripts were found in the H1 message pool of heterozygotes. Using RNA obtained from H1-expressing heterozygous cells 2025 fissions past conjugation, six cDNA clones were obtained by reverse transcription followed by PCR. Partial sequencing showed that two were wild-type at both informative restriction sites, while the others contained one (three clones) or both (one clone) mutant sites. Therefore, although the sample size is small, both mutant and both recombinant classes are present in the H1 mRNA transcript pool of unassorted heterozygotes. Interestingly, in contrast to the northern blot analysis (Figure 2), this implies that single mutant transcripts are more stable in heterozygotes.
Third, as implied by the presence of wild-type and double-mutant transcripts, both wild-type and double-mutant SerH1 genes are present in heterozygous macronuclei. We combined PCR, end-labeling and RFLP analysis to quantify wild-type and double mutant recombinants in SerH1-1/SerH1-2 heterozygotes 2025 fissions after conjugation. The strategy is shown in Figure 4. Briefly, PCR was used to amplify the SerH1 gene and its 3' flank. The resulting PCR fragments were double digested with XbaI and HaeIII, isolated from a high resolution gel and labeled with 32P at the 3' end. Following electrophoretic separation, the 1258 bp fragment (derived from wildtype and SerH1-2) was isolated and digested with Pfl MI. As shown in Figure 4 (bottom), the wild-type recombinant containing both wildtype HaeIII and Pfl MI sites can be unambiguously distinguished as a 537 bp end labeled fragment (Pfl MI/XbaI*) within the 1258 bp (HaeIII/XbaI) fragment pool. No 537 bp fragment was observed in control reactions of SerH1-2 DNA (lane 4). This result is consistent with the Southern blot (Figure 3) and unambiguously demonstrates the presence of normal-sized wild-type SerH1 genes in heterozygotes. The ratio of double wild-type (537 bp) fragments to parental SerH1-2 (1047 bp) fragments within the heterozygous macronuclei leads to an estimate of the recombination frequency. In duplicate experiments in which counts were corrected for band contamination (estimated as 11% from homozygous controls), the calculated frequencies of recombinants (wild-type and double-mutant) were 28% and 31%. These values are conservative, first because background due to band contamination (11% as determined from homozygous controls) was subtracted and second, because outside influences, e.g., heteroduplex formation during PCR, inefficient restriction digest, etc., should increase the estimate of mutant sites and decrease the calculated frequency of wild-type alleles.
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Because about 6000 internally eliminated sequences (IESs) are removed during macronuclear development (![]()
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| DISCUSSION |
|---|
In this paper we have demonstrated the occurrence of high-frequency intragenic recombination during macronuclear development. The point mutations in SerH1-1 and SerH1-2 are separated by 726 bp and recombine in all heterozygous macronuclei, resulting in at least 30% recombinant SerH1 genes. Three separate lines of evidence indicate high frequency recombination. First, since a newly developed macronucleus contains about 64 copies of each locus (![]()
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This frequency of intragenic recombination is higher, by orders of magnitude, than mitotic recombination observed in conventional diploid systems (![]()
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The recombination frequency observed here is considerably higher than in other instances of macronuclear recombination. A recombination frequency of ~1% was observed for markers separated by 3 kb on the 21 kb rDNA palindrome (![]()
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In view of the low frequency of macronuclear recombination observed with rDNA and RAPD markers, the question arises as to whether the high frequency intragenic recombination observed between SerH1-1 and SerH1-2 is exceptional. Unfortunately, at this time, maps of macronuclear genes and instances of macronuclear recombination are too few to permit a definitive answer. It is possible, for example, that one or more instances of independent assortment of linked (micronuclear) RAPDs attributed by LONGCOR et al. to developmental chromosome fragmentation (![]()
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Regardless of the generality of its frequency, the regular recombination of SerH1-1 and SerH1-2 suggests that these alleles [located on micronuclear chromosome 4 (F. P. DOERDER, unpublished results)] are paired during macronuclear development. Since the macronucleus of holotrichous ciliates (like Tetrahymena and Paramecium) displays few cytological details as to its organization during either development or division, this is an important insight. It is likely that recombination occurs early in macronuclear development. Cytophotometric measurements show that DNA content increases rapidly from 2C to 4C at the initiation of macronuclear development and that it reaches 64C at the completion of development following cell separation (![]()
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A recombination frequency of 30% predicts that 15% of SerH1 genes in SerH1-1/SerH1-2 heterozygotes should be wild-type at the end of macronuclear development. This means that 15% of assortees should express H1, a value much higher than observed. PCR/RFLP analysis of early H1 negative assortees revealed that all (N = 7) were SerH1-1 (data not shown). Although this implies that SerH1-1 enjoys a replicative advantage, available data suggest the opposite. Analysis of the end-labeling experiments described above reveals that the proportion of SerH1-1/double-mutant alleles to SerH1-2/wild-type alleles is approximately equal. Furthermore, SerH1-1 homozygotes have a growth rate approximately one half that of either wild-type or SerH1-2 homozygote cell lines. Since other strains with defective SerH expression grow normally (![]()
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The presence of reduced levels of H1 mRNA in SerH1-1 and SerH1-2 homozygotes is consistent with the destabilization of mRNA by nonsense mutation. It is therefore interesting that apparently stable single mutant transcripts as detected by RT-PCR are present in SerH1-1/SerH1-2 heterozygotes. The presence of such transcripts suggests a mechanism whereby H1 protein stabilizes SerH1 message, further underscoring the importance of mRNA stability in SerH regulation (![]()
Finally, it is important to emphasize that somatic recombination is a possible mechanism to generate genetic diversity independently of the micronucleus. As argued elsewhere (![]()
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank HARRY VAN KEULEN for many helpful suggestions and discussion. We also thank CARRI GERBER, ALEX LOPEZ and STEVE SHOOK for comments on the manuscript. This research was supported by the Graduate College of Cleveland State University and by personal funds.
Manuscript received March 3, 1997; Accepted for publication November 24, 1997.
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