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Frequent Meiotic Recombination Between the Ends of Truncated Chromosome Fragments of Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Tamar Arbel1,a, Ronen Shemesh1,a, and Giora Simchenaa Department of Genetics, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 91904, Israel
Corresponding author: Giora Simchen, Department of Genetics, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem 91904, Israel., simchen{at}vms.huji.ac.il (E-mail)
Communicating editor: M. LICHTEN
| ABSTRACT |
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A single truncated chromosome fragment (TCF) in diploid cells undergoes frequent ectopic recombination during meiosis between markers located near the ends of the fragment. Tetrads produced by diploids with a single TCF show frequent loss of one of the two markers. This marker loss could result either from recombination of the TCF with one of the two copies of the chromosome from which it was derived or from ectopic recombination between the ends of the TCF. The former would result in shortening of a normal chromosome and lethality in one of the four spores. The high frequency of marker loss in tetrads with four viable spores supports recombination between the TCF ends as the main source of marker loss. Most of the spore colonies that display TCF marker loss contained a TCF with the same marker on both ends. Deletion of most of the pBR322 sequences distal to the marker at one of the subtelomeric regions of the TCF did not reduce the overall frequency of recombination between the ends, but affected the loss of one marker significantly more than the other. We suggest that the mechanism by which the duplication of one end marker and loss of the other occurs is based on association and recombination between the ends of the TCF.
THE telomeric regions of eukaryotic chromosomes are specialized structures. They have a special mode of replication, ensuring the complete replication of the ends, and they possess special protein assemblies, possibly required for the protection of the ends. Broken chromosomes lacking telomeric structures at their ends are very unstable, due not only to incomplete replication but also to degradation and end-to-end fusion (![]()
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Most organisms also possess telomere-associated middle repetitive sequences like the He-T element of Drosophila melanogaster (![]()
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Chromosome fragments (CFs) were found to associate and recombine during meiosis with the chromosomes from which they were derived, thus interfering with their meiotic segregation and resulting in increased meiotic nondisjunction (NDJ; ![]()
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We constructed a new type of CFs derived from chromosome VII of S. cerevisiae and named them truncated chromosomal fragments (TCFs). These fragments were created from "regular" CFs, that run from a certain site on chromosome VII to the telomere of the same arm, by shortening that arm. Both the generation of the original CFs and their shortening were based on the chromosome fragmentation method of ![]()
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plasmids:
Fragmentation plasmids for generating the CFs were constructed by cloning restriction fragments into the fragmentation vector YCFT4 [YCF4 of ![]()
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To replace the genetic markers on the CFs and the TCFs, pTA738, pTA776, and pTA777 were constructed in the following way. The overhangs of the 3.2-kb BamHI fragment containing the gene ADE2 (from R854, a gift from G. S. Roeder) were filled in using the Klennow component of DNA polymerase I, and the fragment was then inserted between the sites PvuII and EcoRV of YCFT3 to create pTA738. Similarly, a 3.2-kb BamHI fragment containing the gene TRP5 (V. ZAKIAN, personal communication) was cloned between the PvuII and EcoRV sites of YCFT3 to create pTA776. Plasmid pTA777 was constructed by cloning the 1.5-kb PstI-BamHI fragment from YCFT3, which contains the Y', between the PvuII and NsiI sites of YIp5. YCFT3 was first digested with BamHI, the overhangs filled in by the Klennow fragment of DNA polymerase I, and then was digested with PstI.
Yeast strains:
DA10-F is a diploid strain whose parental haploids are HA19-F (MATa his4-t2
can1 ade2-d1 ura3-52 cyh2 leu1::HIS4) and 91H-3 (MAT
lys2-201 his4-t2
ade2 ura3-52 trp5d); all the diploid yeast strains are isogenic to DA10-F. The different diploid strains (names starting with D) were constructed by transforming the haploid strain 91H-3 or its derivatives and then crossing them to HA19-F.
Strains carrying different TCFs were constructed in three steps. Diploid strain DC699: 91H-3 was transformed with pTA695 that had been digested with BamHI and BglII to generate the CF C-CYH2. Next, the URA3 marker on the CF was replaced by the ADE2 gene by transformation with pTA738 digested with PvuI and SalI. Finally, the CF was shortened by transformation with pTA699 digested with BglII to generate the TCF T-CUP2 (Figure 1). Strains DL697 and DL744: 91H-3 were transformed with pTA773 digested with BglII to generate the CF C-LEU1, and the marker URA3 was replaced by the gene ADE2 as described for C-CYH2. For DL697, the CF was shortened by transforming with pTA697 digested with BglII to generate the TCF L-CYH2 (Figure 1), and for DL744 the CF was shortened by transforming with pTA744 digested with BamHI and BglII to generate the TCF L-TRP5 (Figure 1). For strain DC699-R, the marker URA3 on the TCF T-CUP2 was first replaced by the gene TRP5 by transformation with pTA776 digested with PstI, followed by transformation with pTA777 digested with BglII and SalI. The final TCF carries the gene URA3 at the end of its long arm but lacks all the pBR322 sequences between URA3 and the Y', including the gene bla, coding for ß-lactamase (Figure 1).
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The generation of the CFs and the TCFs was confirmed by separating chromosome-size DNA on the CHEF-II apparatus (Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA). Replacements of genetic markers on CFs and TCFs were confirmed by Southern blots and hybridization of both chromosome-size DNA separated by CHEF gel electrophoresis and digested DNA separated on standard agarose gels.
Media and general procedures:
Yeast cells were grown vegetatively in the nonselective YEPD medium (1% yeast extract, 2% Bacto-pepton, and 2% dextrose); for selective growth, cells were grown on SC medium (synthetic complete, 0.17% yeast nitrogen base, 0.5% ammonium sulfate, and 2% dextrose) that contained all nutrients prescribed by the auxotrophic mutations, except one (i.e., SC-Ura, SC-Trp etc.). For plates, 1.5% Bacto-agar was added. Cells were sporulated by replica plating to sporulation (SPO) plates (0.25% yeast extract, 1.5% potassium acetate, 0.05% dextrose, 1.5% Bacto-agar, and supplemented with the required nutrients) and incubated at 30° for 45 days.
All yeast transformations were performed by the lithium acetate procedure of ![]()
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| RESULTS |
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Construction of TCFs:
Using a modified version of the yeast fragmentation vectors developed by ![]()
Expectations of recombination events involving TCFs:
During meiosis of a diploid containing a single TCF, the fragment can either recombine with chromosome VII or remain nonrecombinant. In the latter case the tetrad is expected to have two Ura+ Ade+ spores and two Ura- Ade- spores. The outcome of a reciprocal recombination event between the TCF and chromosome VII is expected to be a fragment that has regained the full-length arm, all the way to the chromosomal telomere, and a shortened chromosome; haploid progeny that carry only this shortened chromosome are expected to be nonviable (Figure 2). It means that when the TCF recombines with chromosome VII, four-viable-spore tetrads will be recovered only if the recombinant fragment and the shortened chromosome migrate to the same pole in meiosis I (Figure 2). The outcome of such an event is a tetrad with two Ura+ Ade+ spores and two Ura- Ade- spores, which is phenotipically indistinguishable from tetrads where the TCF did not recombine with chromosome VII. Among the tetrads with four viable spores of diploid strains containing a TCF, we do not expect any Ura- Ade+ and/or Ura+ Ade- spores. Such spores, however, could be expected in tetrads with only three viable spores (Figure 2B and Figure C). Such three-viable-spore tetrads were examined for strains with a TCF and the frequency of recombination between the TCF and chromosome VII was found to be frequent, although variable between strains (Table 1).
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Analysis of tetrads with four viable spores derived from strains with TCFs:
In a tetrad analysis of strains with a TCF that was marked with URA3 and ADE2 at the two ends, up to 10% of the tetrads with four viable spores contained Ura- Ade+ and/or Ura+ Ade- spores (Table 2). The unusual tetrads were of three different types, as presented in Table 2; they all have two Ura- Ade- spores and at least one spore that is either Ura- Ade+ or Ura+ Ade-. In addition to the markers URA3 and ADE2 on the TCF, the strains have also six heterozygous markers on four chromosomes. These markers segregated 2:2 in almost all the regular or unusual tetrads; as expected from known frequencies of gene conversion, some 3:1 and 1:3 segregations of various markers were recovered at low frequency (data not shown). We found three types of unusual tetrads (Table 2). Type I tetrad contains one spore of Ura+ Ade- phenotype and another of Ura- Ade+. Type II tetrad contains one spore that is Ura+ Ade- and one Ura+ Ade+. Type III tetrad has one spore Ura- Ade+ and one Ura+ Ade+.
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How did the unusual tetrads arise? As noted above, they could not be the outcome of reciprocal recombination between the TCF and chromosome VII. The following five possible explanations for the formation of the unusual tetrads were tested.
Alternative possible explanations for the formation of unusual tetrads:
(1) A nonreciprocal recombination process has occurred between the TCF and the homologous region on one of the chromosomes VII. The fragment has been lengthened to the chromosomal telomere by a long-range gene conversion event, with no reciprocal shortening of the chromosome. This may explain the Ura- Ade+ spores, but not the Ura+ Ade- ones, as there is no homology between the short arm of the TCF, where the ADE2 gene is located, and chromosome VII (![]()
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Haploid progeny that express one of the genetic markers of the TCF contain a TCF:
To distinguish among the above explanations, we first asked whether the haploid progeny that express only one of the genetic markers of the TCF actually contained the fragment. Of the 15 progeny checked by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (CHEF) of chromosome-size DNA, all carried fragments. In one of the progeny the fragment reverted to the original length of the CF (before shortening), while the remaining 14 retained the size of the TCF (Figure 3). In one case, the fragment with the length of the original CF came from a Ura- Ade+ spore colony, from a type III tetrad (Table 2). Having a fragment in all the unusual progeny that we examined excluded the possibility that one of the mutant genes at the "native" locations was converted from a wild-type gene on the TCF and that the TCF was subsequently lost (possibility 4).
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The unexpressed genes are not present on the TCFs:
To see whether the TCFs carried sequences of the unexpressed genes, the pulsed-field gels were blotted and the membranes were hybridized with the URA3 and ADE2 genes as probes. As can be seen in Figure 3, a and b, the TCFs from the Ura+ Ade- colonies hybridize with URA3 but not with ADE2. The converse situation is found for the fragments from Ura- Ade+ colonies: they hybridize with the ADE2 probe and not with URA3. As no sequences of the unexpressed genes could be detected on the TCFs, we excluded the possibilities that the unexpressed genes were either silenced by some epigenetic mechanism (2) or converted from the mutant alleles at the native sites (3). In all of the colonies examined, both URA3 and ADE2 hybridized only to the TCF and to their native chromosomes (namely, URA3 hybridized to the band representing chromosome V and ADE2 to the chromosome XV band; Figure 3, a and b).
The singly expressed marker is present at both ends of the TCF:
How are the genes URA3 and ADE2 eliminated from the TCFs? If the elimination occurred by recombinational interactions between the two ends of the same fragment, it was expected to involve transfer of genetic information from one terminus to the other. In this case, we should be able to detect sequences of the expressed genetic marker at both ends of the TCF. This would not be the case if the elimination occurred through interaction between the end of the TCF and a chromosomal telomere. Such an interaction would lead to loss of one marker at the end of the TCF, without the gain of the other marker at this particular end.
The 160-kb TCF T-CUP2, which spans the CYH2-CUP2 interval, contains a unique site for the restriction enzyme NotI (![]()
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NotI digestion of DNA from the unusual haploid progeny, and hybridization with either URA3 or ADE2, revealed that in all cases the Ura+ Ade- haploids gave 115- and 45-kb bands, both of which hybridized with the URA3 gene, and the Ura- Ade+ haploids gave two bands of these sizes that hybridized with the ADE2 gene (Figure 4, a and b). We conclude that, in almost all of these cases, there has been recombination between the two ends of the TCF without involvement of the chromosomal telomeres. The one exception is the Ura- Ade+ spore that contains a fragment that was of the original CF size (Figure 3, lane 3). In this case, ADE2 hybridized only to a 45-kb band (Figure 4, lane 3).
Deletion of pBR322 sequences at the end of the long arm of the TCF:
The telomeres of the different chromosomes consist of homologous telomeric and subtelomeric sequences. The two ends of the TCF have a different structure and share with each other pBR322 sequences that were derived from the fragmentation vectors. We assumed that the homology between those pBR322 sequences could be the primary source for the very high rate of recombination events between the ends. It was shown previously that the bla gene of pBR322 (coding for ß-lactamase) functions as a hotspot for meiotic recombination when inserted in homologous positions in chromosome III (![]()
The unusual haploid progeny of strain DC699-R were examined in the same way as those of strain DC699 and revealed exactly the same results. All 8 haploids examined (out of 18 four-viable-spore tetrads that showed TCF marker loss; see Table 2) contained a fragment the size of the TCF, and the fragments hybridized either to URA3 (DNA from Ura+ Ade- spores) or to ADE2 (DNA from Ura- Ade+ spores), but not to both probes (data not shown). Digestion of DNA with NotI and hybridization with URA3 and ADE2 revealed that in this case, too, all the fragments were carrying sequences of the expressed marker on both ends (Figure 5). These results indicate that homology for the pBR322 sequences distal to the genetic marker (bla) is not required for the induction of the recombination processes between the two ends of the TCFs. The proximal pBR322 sequence (1.2 kb including tet, Figure 1) could play a role in recombination between the ends of the TCF. Disruption of the homology between the remaining pBR322 sequence near the URA3 marker (tet) and the sequence near the ADE2 marker, which is disrupted by CEN4, seems to affect the direction of end-to-end recombination of the TCF (Table 2). Fewer type III than type II tetrads were found for DC699-R compared with DC699 (a contingency
2[1] is 4.79 without Yates correction, 0.05 > P > 0.025, or 3.06 with the correction, and 0.10 > P > 0.05). The results, thus, do not exclude the involvement of these sequences in the recombination events (see DISCUSSION).
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| DISCUSSION |
|---|
A novel type of CF was constructed by shortening the long arm of "regular" CFs, using the fragmentation method of ![]()
During meiosis of diploid cells carrying a TCF, the two termini of these fragments interact to give a high level of meiotic recombination. These events were observed in up to 10% of the four-viable-spores tetrads. In these cases one or two of the spores contained a TCF that had lost one of its terminal genetic markers. None of the tetrads had two spores with TCFs that lost the same marker (i.e., two Ura+ Ade- or two Ura- Ade+ spores). Such tetrads are expected from recombination between the two ends of a TCF during the mitotic growth prior to meiosis. Therefore, we could conclude that all the events occurred during meiosis.
In only one case did an unusual haploid progeny (from type II tetrad, Table 2) not result from recombination between the two termini of the TCF. In this case, a gene conversion-like event between the TCF and chromosome VII has probably occurred, reverting the fragment to the original size of the CF before its shortening. As this tetrad had four viable spores, the full-length CF could not result from reciprocal recombination with chromosome VII. Separating chromosome-size DNA from the four haploid progeny of this tetrad confirmed that each carried a full-length chromosome VII (data not shown). Except for this case, all the unusual tetrads are the result of recombination between the two termini of a TCF.
There are three types of unusual tetrads (Table 2), in all of which (as in the "regular" tetrads) two of the spores do not contain a fragment (and are Ura- Ade-). The two other spores in each of the tetrads contain a TCF. In type I tetrads, there is one Ura+ Ade- spore and one Ura- Ade+ (Table 2); the TCF in one spore carries the gene UAR3 at both termini while the TCF in the other spore carries ADE2 at both termini. In types II or III tetrads (Table 2), one of the spores carries the two genetic markers while the second carries the same marker at both termini. We suggest that during meiosis the single TCF folds on itself, enabling the homologous sequences at the two ends to interact. Type III tetrads result from reciprocal recombination between the ends of different sister chromatids, while types II and III are the outcome of nonreciprocal transfer (gene conversion) of sequences from one end of the TCF to the other. Reciprocal recombination between the ends of the same chromatid would give rise to TCF with the gene ADE2 at the end of the long arm and the gene URA3 at the short arm, but such an event would be phenotypically indistinguishable from the regular tetrads. This means that the actual number of reciprocal recombination events is probably twice the number recovered and that recombination between the two termini of a TCF actually occurs in more meioses than identified in our experiments.
Three different TCFs were examined (Table 2), and all gave high proportions of the unusual tetrads. These three TCFs are homologous to different regions of the left arm of chromosome VII, so each has different unique sequences adjacent to the sequences of the fragmentation vector. Apparently the high-level recombination is not greatly influenced by the size of the TCF, but it might differ due to the presence of chromosome VII unique sequences. Higher differences between different TCF-carrying strains regarding the frequency of recombination between the TCF and chromosome VII were observed (Table 1).
There are three types of homologies between the two ends of the TCFs. These are sequences of the bacterial plasmid pBR322 and part of the subtelomeric element Y', both originating from the fragmentation vectors (Figure 1), and the telomeric (CA[13])n elements that were acquired by the ends after the fragmentation (![]()
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An alternative explanation to the effect of the deletion might be that it somehow stabilizes the interaction and/or pairing between the ends, thus leading to an increase in reciprocal exchanges instead of the two gene conversion types. Type I of unusual tetrads (Table 2) is most likely a result of reciprocal recombination that resolves in the region of pBR322 homology, proximal to the genetic markers (Figure 1).
The occurrence of double strand breaks (DSBs) during meiosis in S. cerevisiae has been documented at several distinct sites that are associated with elevated meiotic recombination (recombination hotspots; see ![]()
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There are two main families of Y' subtelomeric elements, differing primarily in their sizes (![]()
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We believe that even though the telomeres have an effect on recombination, for the most part recombination does not occur between telomeres or between subtelomeric sequences of nonhomologous chromosomes. When a single TCF is present, the subtelomeric sequences and telomeres might mediate interaction between its ends.
| FOOTNOTES |
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1 These authors contributed equally to this work. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
This work was supported by a grant from the U.S.-Israel Binational Science Foundation. We thank Drs. Michael Lichten, Shoshana Klein, and two anonymous reviewers for suggestions and comments on the manuscript.
Manuscript received July 13, 1998; Accepted for publication August 12, 1999.
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A. B. Barton, Y. Su, J. Lamb, D. Barber, and D. B. Kaback A Function for Subtelomeric DNA in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Genetics, October 1, 2003; 165(2): 929 - 934. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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