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Chromosomal Position Effects Reveal Different cis-Acting Requirements for rDNA Transcription and Sex Chromosome Pairing in Drosophila melanogaster
Albert Briscoe, Jr.a and John E. Tomkielaa Center for Molecular Medicine and Genetics, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan 48202
Corresponding author: John E. Tomkiel, 5047 Gullen Mall 5117 BSB, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48202., jtomkiel{at}cmb.biosci.wayne.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: R. S. HAWLEY
| ABSTRACT |
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In Drosophila melanogaster, the rDNA loci function in ribosome biogenesis and nucleolar formation and also as sex chromosome pairing sites in male meiosis. These activities are not dependent on the heterochromatic location of the rDNA, because euchromatic transgenes are competent to form nucleoli and restore pairing to rDNA-deficient X chromosomes. These transgene studies, however, do not address requirements for the function of the endogenous rDNA loci within the heterochromatin. Here we describe two chromosome rearrangements that disrupt rDNA functions. Both rearrangements are translocations that cause an extreme bobbed visible phenotype and XY nondisjunction and meiotic drive in males. However, neither rearrangement interacts with a specific Y chromosome, Ymal+, that induces male sterility in combination with rDNA deletions. Molecular studies show that the translocations are not associated with gross rearrangements of the rDNA repeat arrays. Rather, suppression of the bobbed phenotypes by Y heterochromatin suggests that decreased rDNA function is caused by a chromosomal position effect. While both translocations affect rDNA transcription, only one disrupts meiotic XY pairing, indicating that there are different cis-acting requirements for rDNA transcription and rDNA-mediated meiotic pairing.
ACTIVE transcription of ribosomal DNA (rDNA) is required in all organisms for both nucleolar formation and ribosome biogenesis. Thus, it is somewhat paradoxical that in many multicellular eukaryotes, the rDNA loci reside in the heterochromatin, which is generally transcriptionally quiescent. This localization suggests that some property of heterochromatin is important for rDNA function and/or maintenance. It is possible that a heterochromatic environment is required to suppress recombination between the rDNA genes, which are tandemly repeated within each locus. Localization of the transcriptional silencing protein Sir2 to the nucleolus in yeast and increased rDNA recombination in sir2 mutants (![]()
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The functional significance of a heterochromatic location of the rDNA has best been addressed in Drosophila melanogaster, where the availability of rDNA deletions and transgenes has allowed the assessment of various aspects of rDNA function. In Drosophila, the rDNA resides in two roughly equally sized clusters: in the heterochromatin of the X chromosome and on the short arm of the entirely heterochromatic Y chromosome (![]()
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Considering the vital role of rDNA, the maintenance of insertion-bearing cistrons is a conundrum. Their retention may suggest that they have a function that is not dependent on transcription. In this regard, the rDNA arrays in Drosophila have been shown to serve an additional function in male meiosis, where they act as pairing sites between the X and Y (![]()
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The 240-bp IGS sequences must possess some property in addition to sequence homology that allows them to function as pairing sites. This may be related to their ability to act as enhancers of rDNA transcription, but may not depend on transcription per se. For example, the 240-bp repeat sequences may form an open chromatin domain that is required for both pairing and transcription.
The influence of the heterochromatic environment on all three rDNA functions (XY pairing, nucleolar formation, and ribosome biogenesis) has been partially addressed by transgene studies in Drosophila. Remarkably, a single euchromatic rDNA cistron is capable of directing each of these activities, including formation of a mininucleolus, ameliorating a bobbed phenotype (![]()
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Here we investigate the relationship between the different activities of the rDNA loci in Drosophila through the study of two rearrangements with breakpoints that cause a position effect on the X chromosome rDNA locus. We characterize the effects of the rearrangements on sex chromosome pairing and recovery, rDNA copy number, organization, and transcription. Our results suggest that there are cis-acting requirements for both rDNA transcription and rDNA-mediated pairing at the endogenous locus and that these may differ for each activity. We find that full function of the endogenous rDNA locus depends not merely on the presence of the rDNA cistrons but also on chromosomal context.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Drosophila culture:
Drosophila stocks and crosses were maintained at 25° on standard cornmeal-yeast-agar food. The compound-X (C(1)RM, In (1)EN, y v), the compound-XY (YSX.YL, y), and the compound-4 (C(4) ci ey) stocks are described in ![]()
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Mutagenesis and screen for mutations causing sex chromosome nondisjunction:
We performed a screen to recover mutations that cause sex chromosome nondisjunction in males. Adult males bearing an X chromosome marked with yellow (y) and the balancer second and third chromosomes SM2, Cy and TM3, Ubx were mutagenized with 10 mM ethyl methane- sulfonate (EMS; ![]()
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Mutagenized males were mated to compound-X females that carried a Y chromosome marked with y+ (i.e., X^X/y+Y). These females also carried isogenized cn second and ry506 third chromosomes. Sons bearing the SM2, Cy and TM3, Ubx chromosomes were individually mated to compound-X females that lacked a Y (i.e., X^X/O). From this latter cross, all regular X/O sons lacked the Y chromosome fertility factors and thus were sterile. The exceptional X/Y sons that received both X and Y chromosomes as a result of paternal sex chromosome nondisjunction had wild-type body color and were fertile. These fertile sons were allowed to mate with their X^X/Y sisters to establish stocks of the mutagenized X chromosomes. The cn ry F2 progeny were selected to remove the SM2, Cy and TM3, Ubx chromosomes from the stocks. All 116 first-round positives were retested in triplicate, and two mutant X chromosomes were identified that consistently caused >1% nondisjunction.
Chromosome cytology:
Prophase chromosomes from larval neuroblast squashes were prepared as described by ![]()
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For examination of meiotic chromosomes, testes from adults or third instar larvae were dissected in Schneider's Drosophila media (GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, MD), transferred into acetic acid/orcein for 5 min, teased apart, then squashed under a silanized coverslip in 45% acetic acid (![]()
All chromosome preparations were examined at x1000 magnification using a Nikon Optiphot light microscope. Images were captured using a Sensys cooled CCD camera (Photometrics, Tuscon, AZ) and IP lab software (Scanalytics, Fairfax, VA).
Recombination mapping of mutants:
Both X chromosome mutations were mapped with respect to m wy sd and oso, which are at positions 36.1, 40.7, 51.1, and 59.2 on the genetic map, respectively. The phenotypes scored for mapping were sex chromosome nondisjunction in X/Y males and bobbed in X/O progeny. These two phenotypes cosegregated in all individuals tested. The number of recombinant chromosomes tested for mscd1 was 406, and for mscd2 was 197. The following map distances in centimorgans were obtained: m3.7wy10.1sd8.9os29.1mscd1 and m3.6wy9.1sd7.6os10.7mscd2. The expansion of the proximal recombination map in mscd1 is unlikely to be a reflection of low penetrance of the phenotype. In unrelated crosses involving mscd1 males, the phenotypes were completely penetrant and nonoverlapping with wild type. Recombination is normally suppressed in proximity to the centromere (![]()
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Measurement of rDNA copy number and expression:
Genomic DNA was isolated from 100 adult X/O male flies of each indicated genotype by the method of ![]()
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For measuring transcript levels, total RNA was isolated using the GLASSMAX RNA isolation kit (GIBCO BRL) from 100 pairs of testes dissected from X/O or X/Y males. RNA was quantitated by measuring the OD260, and 1 µg was used from each sample to generate cDNA. First-strand synthesis was performed using 2 pmoles of each of the reverse primers for 18S, 28S, and ß2-tubulin described above and 200 units SuperScript II RNase H-reverse transcriptase as per the manufacturer's instructions (GIBCO BRL). A reaction lacking reverse transcriptase was performed in parallel for each sample. First-strand cDNA was amplified by PCR as above using 1/20 of the first-strand reaction as template. All reactions were performed in duplicate.
PCR products were separated by electrophoresis through 1.0% agarose gels containing 0.4 µg/ml ethidium bromide. Gels were photographed using a Kodak Digital Science electrophoresis documentation and analysis system 120 (Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester, NY) and band intensities measured using IPLab Spectrum software (Scanalytics). A plot of intensity vs. amount was generated, and the best-fit line was determined by linear regression. The slope and Y intercept were used to calculate an average value for each plot.
Comparison of IGS length variants:
IGS profiles from the X chromosome rDNA from mscd1/O, mscd2/O, and wild-type X/O males were compared by examining ethidium bromide-stained PCR products on agarose gels. The wild-type X chromosome used was the progenitor chromosome on which the mutations had been induced. Complete IGS were amplified using a forward primer at the 3' end of the 28S rDNA gene (IGSF) and a reverse primer located in the external transcribed spacer region (ETSR) described by ![]()
DNA sequencing:
The intergenic spacers from wild-type and mutant stocks were amplified by PCR using IGSF- and ETSR primers as above. DNA excised from agarose gels was purified by spinning through silanized glass wool, phenol:chloroform extraction, and ethanol precipitation. DNA was sequenced by the Molecular Core Facility of the Wayne State University Center for Molecular Medicine and Genetics, using the same primers used for PCR amplification and dye terminator PCR cycle sequencing on an ABI prism 377 DNA sequencer (Perkin-Elmer, Norwalk, CT) as per manufacturer's instructions. Sequences of IGS PCR products have been submitted to GenBank, accession nos.
AF191293,
AF191294, and
AF191295.
| RESULTS |
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Screen for mutations affecting meiotic chromosome segregation in males:
We performed a screen to identify mutations on the X chromosome that increase the frequency of sex chromosome nondisjunction at meiosis I in Drosophila males. Of 5357 males bearing an EMS-treated X chromosome tested, 116 (2.2%) produced one or more progeny that received both paternal sex chromosomes. Lines were established from each of these 116 initial positives, and mutant males from 21 of these reproducibly showed increased rates of XY nondisjunction in subsequent tests (>0.5%). The majority of these mutations were unstable, however, and retested with wild-type levels of nondisjunction after being kept in stock for a period of 6 months to 1 year. A similar instability associated with X-linked male meiotic mutants in Drosophila has been previously reported (![]()
mscd1 and mscd2 are translocations between the X and fourth chromosome:
Salivary gland chromosomes from female larvae heterozygous for mscd1 or mscd2 and the wild-type progenitor X chromosome were examined, and no abnormalities were detected in the euchromatin. However, examination of prophase larval neuroblast chromosomes stained with Hoechst 33258 indicated that both mscd1- and mscd2-bearing chromosomes were translocations with one breakpoint on the fourth chromosome and the other in X heterochromatin (Fig 1). Only the 4P XD halves could be analyzed, as the reciprocal translocation halves were not recovered. We mapped the X heterochromatic breakpoints onto the mitotic maps of ![]()
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The majority of the X heterochromatin is retained on mscd1 with the exception of the regions corresponding to the X centromere and the right arm, h33 and h34. In neuroblast chromosome spreads of 20 individuals heterozygous for mscd1, all had two free fourth chromosomes, suggesting that the haplo-insufficient Minute locus M(4)101 may be deleted or inactive on the translocated chromosome 4.
The second translocation, mscd2, appears to retain nearly all of the X heterochromatin, including the centromere region, and the entire fourth chromosome attached to the short arm of the X. It also retains a functional allele of M(4)101, as 16 of 24 larval neuroblast spreads examined had only one free fourth chromosome, but adults bearing the translocation do not appear Minute.
In agreement with our cytology, mscd males exhibited a transmission pattern expected of pseudolinkage. As shown in Table 1, a single cross between Xy/y+Y males and y w sn; C(4) ci ey females can be used to simultaneously monitor sex and fourth chromosome disjunction. From such matings, paternal sex chromosome nondisjunction results in y+ daughters (from XY-bearing sperm) or y sons (from nullo-XY sperm). Sperm lacking a fourth chromosome as a result of nondisjunction or loss produce ci ey progeny, whereas progeny produced from diplo-4 sperm cannot be distinguished. In these crosses, mscd1 and mscd2 males produced 4.2 and 10.9% XY exceptions, respectively. The mscd2 males also produced ~5% ci ey progeny. Because we could detect only half of fourth-chromosome exceptional gametes (the nullo-4 class) in only one sex (the nontranslocation-bearing males) this corresponds to ~20% fourth-chromosome nondisjunction, assuming no chromosome loss. The presence of two free fourth chromosomes in mscd1 males precluded detection of fourth-chromosome nondisjunction, as nullo-exceptional progeny would have resulted only if all three fourth chromosomes cosegregated.
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In addition to establishing that both mscd mutations were X;4 translocations, we noted that the major constriction within the X heterochromatin of each translocation chromosome was consistently reduced in size relative to that of the wild-type X (Fig 1). This heterochromatic region, h29, corresponds to the location of the rDNA (![]()
The mscd mutations are alleles of the bobbed locus:
Several additional observations also suggested that the mscd mutations might affect the rDNA. When mscd1 or mscd2 males were mated to X^X/O females, the X/O sons produced had short bristles, abnormal abdomens, and reduced viability. These features are characteristic of a bobbed (bb) phenotype that results from a reduction in the number of rDNA repeats and reflects reduced protein translation owing to a deficiency in functional ribosomes (![]()
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We asked if the mscd mutations affect rDNA function by testing for complementation of several bb alleles, including bb5, bbl (bobbed lethal), and In(1)sc4Lsc8R. These bb mutations vary in severity, reflecting differences in rDNA copy number (Tartof and Hawley in ![]()
Measurement of rDNA copy number and activity:
We measured the amount of rDNA on each mscd-bearing chromosome relative to the wild-type parent X chromosome by performing quantitative PCR on genomic DNA isolated from X/O males. Copy numbers of both 18S and 28S rDNA sequences were quantified relative to the single copy ß2-tubulin gene. As a control, we also measured rDNA copy number in bb5/O males. The bb5 allele produces a relatively mild bb phenotype and therefore was expected to contain from 50 to 80% of the wild-type number of X rDNA repeats. Neither 18S nor 28S sequences were significantly reduced in copy number in mscd mutants, but were reduced in the bb5 control (Table 2). To further ensure that the primers and PCR conditions were suitable, we verified this result by Southern hybridization to genomic dot blots using the entire rDNA cistron as a probe. Densitometric scans indicated that mscd1 and mscd2 X chromosomes contained 107 ± 11% and 91 ± 8% rDNA relative to the wild-type progenitor X, respectively (data not shown).
These measurements also reveal that compensation is not defective in mscd mutants. Compensation refers to an amplification of rDNA sequences on an X chromosome that occurs in an individual lacking rDNA on the homolog (e.g., in X/O males or in X/In(1)sc4Lsc8R females). This amplification results from a disproportionate replication of rDNA in somatic tissues and is controlled by the compensatory response locus that maps adjacent to the rDNA (![]()
We asked if transcription of the rDNA was altered by performing quantitative RT-PCR on total RNA isolated from testes of mutant and wild-type X/O and X/Y males, using the same primers and conditions as for the DNA measurements. For both mutants, we found a small but consistent reduction (~20%) in rRNA levels in X/O but not X/Y males. A similar reduction was observed for bb5/O males, but only for the 18S transcript (Table 2). These results suggest that there may not be a strict correlation between the severity of a bobbed phenotype and levels of accumulated rDNA transcripts in the adult testis. Nonetheless, they suggest that rDNA transcription from each mscd X chromosome is indeed decreased.
IGS within the rDNA loci on mscd1 and mscd2:
Several observations suggest that functional differences exist between individual cistrons within the rDNA arrays. First, both the pairing ability of transgenes and rDNA transcription (![]()
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To ask if rearrangements of rDNA sequences might be responsible for the mscd mutations, we looked for changes in the profile of IGS repeats. IGS regions were amplified from X/O genomic DNA by PCR using a forward primer located in the 3' end of the 28S gene and a reverse primer located in the 5' end of the external transcribed spacer, which is located 5' of the 18S coding sequence (![]()
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The mscd phenotypes might instead have resulted from smaller scale changes within the IGS repeats, such as point mutations in the 240-bp subunits. Such mutations may have become fixed within the entire array by the gene conversion-mediated process of homogenization (![]()
The 1.4-kb band, present only in the wild-type strain, contains the 3' end of the 28S gene, seven 95-bp subunit repeats, followed by two repeats of 120 bp that are internal to the 240-bp repeat, and the conserved promoter consensus within the ETS. It lacks a 330-bp subunit repeat. The portion of the 240-bp repeat unit present lacks homology to the promoter. Given that this variant contains only a partial 240-bp repeat, it seems unlikely that its absence in the mutants can account for the phenotypes. We found no sequence difference between wild-type and mscd chromosomes for the 1.2-kb and 4.2-kb repeat variants. Of note, the 4.2-kb variant contains at least one 240-bp repeat 5' to an intact 18S, indicating that both mscd chromosomes contain sequences that could potentially function as meiotic pairing sites.
These data suggest that the mscd phenotypes do not result from changes in the overall organization and representation of sequences in the rDNA loci, but rather that they might be owing to changes external to the rDNA. These may include changes in trans-acting factors (e.g., mutations in heterochromatic genes required for rDNA function) or cis-acting effects (e.g., position effects or mutations in cis-acting regulatory loci).
Complementation by rDNA transgenes:
To differentiate between trans-acting and cis-acting effects of the mutants, we tested the ability of rDNA transgenes to complement. Additional copies of rDNA inserted into the euchromatin have been shown to act in trans to ameliorate the bb phenotype in rDNA-deficient flies and also to confer the ability to form nucleoli (![]()
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To test for complementation of the bb phenotype, a transgene containing a complete rDNA cistron, inserted at salivary gland chromosome band 68B or 94B ([rib7], ![]()
As expected, autosomal transgenes did not alter XY disjunction in either mscd mutant. However, the viability of bb X/O sons was measurably affected by the presence of the transgene (Table 3). The recovery of X/O sons receiving the transgene (marked with a wild-type copy of the rosy gene, ry+) was measured relative to X/O sons that did not receive the transgene (ry-). This ratio was adjusted by the relative recoveries of ry+ vs. ry bb+ sisters to control for any viability differences due to the ry+ marker. Sons receiving the transgene survived two to three times as well as their brothers that did not receive the transgene. The addition of the transgene also significantly decreased the bb-associated developmental delay (![]()
A cis effect might result from a mutation in the rDNA itself or in a gene required for the activity of the heterochromatic rDNA array (e.g., a function affecting the chromatin structure of the locus). We expected that in either case, the meiotic phenotype would be complemented by the addition of euchromatic rDNA transgenes in cis. To test this, three different transgenes were recombined onto both mscd1 and mscd2 chromosomes. The first transgene contained a single copy of the complete rDNA cistron, containing the 18S, 28S, and IGS sequences, including 11 copies of the 240-bp repeat subunits that contain pairing ability ([rib7]1A1-4; ![]()
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A significant decrease in sex chromosome nondisjunction was observed in mscd1 males bearing the [rib7]* HJ+B transgene derivative (Table 4). The other transgenes had no effect. Of the three transgenes used, [rib7]* HJ+B has been shown to be most effective at promoting pairing of rDNA-deleted X chromosomes (![]()
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Together, the results of somatic and meiotic complementation by rDNA transgenes argue that the mscd defects are in cis-acting components required for ribosome biogenesis and/or meiotic pairing. The rescue of both defects in mscd1 suggests that it behaves as a loss-of-function mutant with respect to both activities. The mscd2 mutation, on the other hand, differentially affects the two functions. It behaves as a loss-of-function mutation with respect to the bb phenotype, whereas XY pairing is unaffected.
Suppression by Y heterochromatin:
Our results suggest that the activity of the rDNA loci on the mscd chromosomes is modified as a result of the translocation breakpoints. This may occur via a stable or a variegated position effect resulting from proximity to fourth chromosome sequences. Position-effect variegation (PEV) of the rDNA has been previously reported for chromosomes with breakpoints within the rDNA (![]()
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The classical test of position-effect variegation is suppression by the Y chromosome (![]()
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Females bearing attached-X chromosomes and Df(Y)S12 were crossed to mscd/Y males, and the viability of the X/Y sons was compared to that of X/O sons produced from matings of X^X/O females and the same mscd/Y males. The presence of Df(Y)S12 increased the recovery of mscd1 and mscd2 sons relative to their X^X/Y sisters (Table 5). Furthermore, these sons were phenotypically bb+. These results confirm that the rDNA is subject to chromosomal position effects in both mscd1 and mscd2.
Comparison of mscd1 and mscd2 phenotypes to rDNA-deletion phenotypes:
In addition to the somatic bb phenotype, three phenotypes are associated with deletions of rDNA on the X chromosome: (1) the X and Y fail to pair at meiosis I (![]()
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Cytological examination of meiosis in mutants:
Deletions of the rDNA specifically disrupt XY pairing in meiosis I in males, resulting in sex chromosome nondisjunction (![]()
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To ask if the XY nondisjunction in mscd males resulted from a pairing defect, we examined orcein-stained meiosis I chromosomes in testis squashes. In such preparations, chromosome pairing can be easily assayed from prophase I until anaphase I by counting the number of orcein-staining bodies within meiocytes. Normal meiocytes contain three orcein-positive bodies corresponding to the sex and major autosome bivalents and a smaller body corresponding to the fourth chromosome bivalent. The sex chromosome bivalent can be distinguished from the autosomes by position and shape; it tends to be separate from the autosomes and is more elongated. In all meiocytes from mscd1/Y and mscd2/Y males, the major autosomes appeared to be paired normally. However, in mscd1/Y males, the X and Y were not associated in 13.9% (39/281) meioses examined. The frequency of this phenotype was roughly the same at prophase (14/88, Fig 3A and Fig D) and prometaphase/metaphase (25/172, Fig 3B and Fig E), suggesting a defect in pairing rather than in cohesion. It is also notable that this frequency is higher than predicted from the genetic assays of nondisjunction (4.2%, Table 1), suggesting that some products of these aberrant meioses are eliminated prior to fertilization.
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In contrast, mscd2/Y males did not exhibit the same XY pairing defect. Rather, in 224/227 meioses examined, both sex chromosome and autosome pairing appeared normal. This difference from mscd1 males cannot be attributed to the number of free fourth chromosomes present, as one-third of the mscd2 males also had two free fourth chromosomes. Rather, these observations suggest that, unlike mscd1, the meiotic pairing activity of the rDNA locus is not disrupted by mscd2 and point to a different cause for nondisjunction.
Examination of anaphase I meiocytes of mscd2/Y males indicated that segregation rather than pairing was perturbed. Of 50 anaphase I figures observed in mscd2 males, 24 could be unambiguously classified as abnormal. Chromatin bridges were observed in 6 meiocytes (Fig 3F, HK), and in five cases it could be discerned that the bridge involved the T(1;4) chromosome. In these cells, the Y chromosome was associated with the X portion of the T(1;4), while the fourth chromosome portion of the T(1;4) was displaced toward a pole. A resulting bridge of stretched chromatin was visible between the X and four parts of the T(1;4). In 11 meiocytes, sex chromosomes were observed near the metaphase I plate, while the autosomes were at the poles (Fig 3K), and in 7 additional meiocytes, the sex bivalent was observed near one pole (Fig 3L).
Because Hoeschst staining of neuroblast chromosomes indicated that both the X and fourth chromosome centromeres are present on this translocation, it is possible that such meiosis I bridges result from dicentric behavior; that is, opposite orientation of two functional centromeres on the T(1;4) would result in a bridge as the centromeres segregate at anaphase. However, several observations suggest that kinetic activity is retained at only one centromere. First, in mitosis this translocation does not result in nondisjunction or loss, as mosaicism for X-linked markers and sexually dimorphic structures in translocation-bearing progeny would have been readily detectable but was not observed. Second, we failed to observe bridges in meiosis II. Thus, any dicentric activity would have to be confined to meiosis I. Finally, we never observed a meiosis I bridge in which the X and four halves of the translocation appeared to be leading movement to opposite spindle poles. Notably, in each meiocyte that had a bridge, the Y and free 4 appeared to have oriented to the same pole. In these cells, the XD part of the T(1;4) was clearly associated with the Y, while the 4P part was closer to the opposite pole. The Y portion of the sex bivalent was always observed closer to the pole than the X.
We suggest that these bridges are a consequence of trivalent formation between the Y, the free 4, and the T(1;4). In meioses in which the Y and free 4 orient to the same pole, any lag in separation or segregation of the sex chromosomes with respect to the fourth chromosomes would result in a bridge. The mscd rearrangements may cause such an asynchrony by delaying the release of the sex chromosome cohesion at anaphase, perhaps owing to decreased tension on the X-Y pairing bond as a result of trivalent formation. Asynchrony of bivalent separation at anaphase may reflect a peculiarity of meiosis I in this organism. Whereas in most eukaryotes, synchrony at anaphase initiation is maintained by a metaphase checkpoint that senses improper tension across a bivalent (![]()
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The majority of aneuploidy caused by both mscd1 and mscd2 can be attributed to meiosis I nondisjunction rather than meiosis II nondisjunction or chromosome loss. In mscd males, the frequency of sex chromosome aneuploidy seen at meiosis II was roughly equal to the frequency of meiosis I defects observed, and diplo-XY and nullo-XY cells were approximately equal in number. Of 91 meiosis II anaphases observed in mscd1 males, 4 were nullo-XY and 4 were diplo-XY (8.8% aneuploid). Of 64 meiosis II anaphase spreads observed in mscd2 males, 7 were nullo-XY and 6 were diplo-XY (20.3% aneuploid). No primary meiosis II nondisjunction was observed for either mutation. These cytological observations are consistent with those of crosses of y mscd/y+Y males to X^Xyv/O females in Table 6. Among progeny of such crosses we failed to observe v+ daughters, which would have been indicative of meiosis II nondisjunction.
mscd1 and mscd2 cause meiotic drive:
Meiotic drive associated with rDNA deficiencies favors the recovery of sperm bearing less chromatin (![]()
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Meiotic drive is also evident from the relative recovery of diplo- vs. nullo-exceptional progeny (Table 1 and Table 6). This ratio, RXY/RO, is affected to a greater degree by drive owing to the greater difference in chromatin content between the two sperm genotypes compared (XY vs. nullo-XY). In Table 1, the recovery of X/O (nullo-exceptional) males can be compared to that of X/X/Y (diplo-exceptional) females, and in Table 6 the recovery of X^X/O (nullo-exceptional) females can be compared to that of X/Y (diplo-exceptional) males. In both crosses, the recovery of nullo-XY sperm exceeds that of diplo-XY sperm, despite the fact that the corresponding zygotic genotypes differ. This argues that the differential recoveries of sperm genotypes are not due to differences in zygotic viabilities, but rather reflect the frequencies of fertilization by the different sperm classes.
To gain insight into the mechanism(s) of meiotic drive, we looked for cytological evidence of sperm elimination by examining orcein-stained preparations of postmeiotic spermatids. Our observations suggest that there may be more than one mechanism of sperm elimination in operation and that the effects of each mechanism may differ quantitatively between the two mutants. At the light microscope level, mscd1 males exhibit a sperm differentiation defect apparent in late stages of maturation. Individual cysts, each containing 64 spermatids, can be separated in testis squashes such that related spermatids can be examined. In 29/35 cysts from mscd1 males, as many as 10 spermatid nuclei per cyst that failed to properly elongate were observed (mean abnormal spermatids, 3.1/cyst; Fig 3), producing a round spermatid phenotype very similar to that reported for the male sterile mutation ms(2)46C (see Figure 6C in ![]()
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The proportion of cytologically abnormal spermatids we observed is insufficient to completely account for the differential sperm recoveries from mscd mutants, indicating that sperm are also being eliminated by postdifferentiation events. These may include differential sperm function, transfer, or posttransfer utilization. Such postdifferentiation mechanisms of meiotic drive have been reported in association with both sex chromosome nondisjunction and the differential transmission of autosomal translocations (![]()
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Unlike rDNA deletions, mscd males bearing Ymal+ are fertile:
As a rule, deletions of rDNA that result in elevated frequencies of sex chromosome nondisjunction cause sterility in males bearing Ymal+, a Y chromosome that carries a duplication of the proximal X material (![]()
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Both mscd2/Ymal+ and mscd1/Ymal+ males are fertile, but nondisjunction and drive are increased relative to males bearing a y+ Y (Table 6), which demonstrates that these mutants are qualitatively different from rDNA deletions.
mscd/Ybb- males are semisterile:
An additional phenomenon associated with X chromosome rDNA deletions is the ability to magnify or increase the copy number of rDNA repeats in the presence of a Y chromosome that is also deficient for rDNA (Ybb-; ![]()
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Magnification occurs at a relatively high frequency (110%) in males bearing Ybb- (![]()
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To investigate the synthetic sterility, we examined live and fixed squashes of testes of mscd/BsY bb- males. Only 13/30 mscd1 and 7/18 mscd2I males had motile sperm. Fixation and orcein staining of these preparations revealed that even in males that had motile sperm, most mature sperm bundles had abnormal morphologies. A wide range of phenotypes was observed, from nearly normal bundles with 110 sperm nuclei of abnormal size or shape, to entire cysts of abnormal sperm with round heads (Fig 4D). Examination of orcein-stained meiocytes in these same males, however, revealed no appreciable differences from mscd/Y males in the frequency of sex chromosome pairing. Sex chromosomes were paired in 20/22 meioses in mscd1/Ybb- males and 21/21 mscd2/Ybb-. These observations suggest that Ybb- enhances the sperm maturation defects in mscd males, but not necessarily as a consequence of altering meiosis I sex chromosome behavior.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Position effects on the rDNA:
We have isolated two X;4 translocations that cause sex chromosome nondisjunction at meiosis I in male Drosophila. Both produce a similar bb phenotype characteristic of a reduction in ribosome biogenesis. In mscd males, decreased rDNA transcription results from a chromosomal position effect induced by juxtaposition of the fourth chromosome to the X heterochromatin. Multiple lines of evidence support this conclusion. First, neither copy number nor gross organization of the rDNA is detectably altered by the rearrangements. Thus, the phenotypes do not result from a reduction in rDNA sequences, but rather a change in their activity. We demonstrate directly that the amount of rRNA product from each rearrangement is reduced. Second, the bb phenotypes resulting from the mscd rearrangements are suppressed by addition of rDNA in trans. This indicates that trans-acting factors required for rDNA transcription are intact and suggests that the rDNA locus on each T(1;4) has been affected in cis. In the case of mscd1, meiotic pairing can also be partially restored by an X-linked transgene, indicating that the trans-acting factors required for meiotic rDNA function are also intact in this rearrangement. Finally, the bb phenotypes are suppressed by the addition of Y heterochromatin that lacks rDNA, which suggests that the position effect is variegated rather than stable, as suppression by the Y chromosome is the classical test of PEV (![]()
Euchromatic rDNA transgenes have been shown to function in nucleolar formation and ribosomal biogenesis and in sex chromosome pairing (![]()
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How might such a disruption occur? Spreading effect models of PEV suggest that a disruptive change in chromatin structure may be propagated from a rearrangement breakpoint (![]()
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In the case of mscd2, a spreading model would require that chromatin structure can be perturbed across the X centromere. In this translocation, nearly the entire fourth chromosome is appended to the right arm of the X, and the X centromeric heterochromatin appears to be intact. The rDNA is located in its normal position on the left arm. Thus, the rDNA locus is affected by a breakpoint on the opposite side of the centromere. To our knowledge, PEV across a centromere has not been reported previously. We speculate that the X centromere itself has also been inactivated in this rearrangement, as we do not see evidence for dicentric behavior in mitosis or meiosis. While it is not clear that the mechanism of centromere inactivation is related to transcriptional inactivation of the rDNA, there is precedence for PEV of centromeres in other organisms. In the fission yeast Saccharomyces pombe, genes placed within centromeric sequences variegate, and mutations that affect transcriptional silencing of such centromere-localized genes also affect chromosome segregation (![]()
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An alternative model for the mechanism of PEV on the rDNA is that the mscd rearrangements disrupt the localization of the rDNA to their proper nuclear compartment, resulting in improper expression. A similar model for PEV has been proposed for the heterochromatic light gene. Among rearrangements that cause variegation of light, distal euchromatic breakpoints are recovered more frequently than proximal ones (![]()
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The model of gene misregulation resulting from nuclear mislocalization is particularly attractive for explaining PEV of the rDNA, since the nucleolar organizer can be recognized as a discrete compartment cytologically. Moreover, no regions appear to play a central role in organizing other nuclear structures, such as gems, coiled bodies, and the perinuclear compartment (for review, see



