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MLH1 Mutations Differentially Affect Meiotic Functions in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Eva R. Hoffmanna,b, Polina V. Shcherbakovac, Thomas A. Kunkelc, and Rhona H. Bortsba Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3Q, United Kingdom,
b Department of Genetics, Leicester University, Leicester LE1 7RH, United Kingdom
c Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709
Corresponding author: Rhona H. Borts, Leicester University, University Rd., Leicester LE1 7RH, United Kingdom., rhb7{at}le.ac.uk (E-mail)
Communicating editor: M. LICHTEN
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
To test whether missense mutations in the cancer susceptibility gene MLH1 adversely affect meiosis, we examined 14 yeast MLH1 mutations for effects on meiotic DNA transactions and gamete viability in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mutations analogous to those associated with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) or those that reduce Mlh1p interactions with ATP or DNA all impair replicative mismatch repair as measured by increased mutation rates. However, their effects on meiotic heteroduplex repair, crossing over, chromosome segregation, and gametogenesis vary from complete loss of meiotic functions to no meiotic defect, and mutants defective in one meiotic process are not necessarily defective in others. DNA binding and ATP binding but not ATP hydrolysis are required for meiotic crossing over. The results reveal clear separation of different Mlh1p functions in mitosis and meiosis, and they suggest that some, but not all, MLH1 mutations may be a source of human infertility.
THE mismatch repair system plays a number of roles in maintaining genome stability. During mitosis it primarily ensures avoidance of mutations and inappropriate recombination events (reviewed in ![]()
![]()
) or Msh2p/Msh3p (MutSß) and transduction of a signal by a heterodimer of Mlh1p/Pms1p (MutL
) or Mlh1p/Mlh3p (reviewed in ![]()
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and MutL
are responsible for the majority of repair of mismatches in heteroduplex DNA formed during meiotic recombination (![]()
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The importance of the role(s) that mismatch repair proteins play in meiosis is illustrated by the infertility found in model organisms deficient in some mismatch repair genes (reviewed in ![]()
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msh4, suggesting that they all operate in the same crossover pathway (![]()
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How the Mlh1p/Mlh3p heterodimer exerts its function(s) is not clear. However, by analogy with Escherichia coli MutL, it is thought to act by coordinating downstream "effector" molecules such as helicases (![]()
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To better understand the role of MLH1 in meiosis we have assessed meiotic phenotypes conferred by a number of missense mutations that all result in defective mismatch repair (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plasmids, strains, and sporulation:
MLH1 point mutations were constructed using site-directed mutagenesis (![]()
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HIS4 LEU2 ADE1 trp5-1 cyh2 met13-2 lys2-c ura3-1) and Y55-2835 (MATa his4-r leu2-r ade1-1 TRP5 CYH2 MET13 lys2::InsE-A14 ura3-1). The presence of the mutations was confirmed by DNA sequencing. his4-r is a 4-bp insertion mutation (![]()
A; ![]()
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mlh1) were generated using a PCR-based gene disruption method (![]()
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Genetic analysis and statistical methods:
Genetic markers were analyzed by direct replication of dissected spore colonies to omission media as described previously (![]()
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mlh1 strains. The distribution of tetrad classes with respect to the crossover and viability data were compared using a G-test of heterogeneity (![]()
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< 0.05 is normally set as the basis for rejection of the null hypothesis when a single pairwise comparison is made. However, statistical theory necessitates that
be adjusted to reflect multiple comparisons. Thus when a missense mutation was compared to both the wild-type and the
mlh1 strains (e.g., crossover data and meiotic repair data) P < 0.025 was considered significant. P values <0.017 were considered significant when a given data set was compared to those of the wild-type,
mlh1, and
msh2 strains. The NPD ratio was calculated using the equation of ![]()
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Physical analysis of disomy:
Tetrads with two or three viable spores were analyzed for chromosomal aneuploidy using clamped homogeneous electric field (CHEF) gel analysis (![]()
Alignment and protein modeling:
The E. coli MutL, S. cerevisiae MLH1, and human MLH1 were aligned using MegAlign (DNA Star) by the Jotun Hein method. Molecular representation of the MutL crystal structure (accession no. 1B63.pdb in the Brookhaven protein database) was made using Swiss-PdbViewer.
| RESULTS |
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MLH1 is dominant and haplosufficient:
All of the HNPCC and the mlh1p-N35A, E31A, and R273E-R274E mutations were studied as homozygotes (e.g., mlh1-E31A/ mlh1-E31A). However, the GFRGEAL box mutations were studied in heterozygous diploid strains (e.g., mlh1-F96A/
mlh1). To confirm that this would not interfere with comparisons between strains we analyzed MLH1/
mlh1. The MLH1/
mlh1 strain was indistinguishable from wild type with respect to all meiotic phenotypes (Table 2, Table 3, Table 4, and Table 5), indicating that a single wild-type gene is sufficient to ensure normal levels of crossing over, gene conversion, nondisjunction, and chromosome segregation. We also analyzed mlh1-N35A/MLH1 because mlh1-N35A has been suggested to be dominant negative with respect to mitotic mismatch repair (![]()
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Crossing over is affected only in a subset of mutants:
The MLH1 missense mutations fell into two groups when meiotic crossing over in four genetic intervals was determined (Table 2 and Table 6). Strains bearing group I mutations (mlh1-P25L, mlh1-E31A, mlh1-I65N, mlh1-T114M, mlh1-F96A, mlh1-R97A, and mlh1-G98A) had normal levels of crossing over and had crossover frequencies significantly greater than those of
mlh1 (P < 0.05, G-test of homogeneity). In contrast, the group II strains (mlh1-M32R, mlh1-N35A, mlh1-A41F, mlh1-G64R, mlh1-G98V, mlh1-G243D, and mlh1-R273E-R274E) exhibited reduced crossing over in all four intervals relative to the wild type (P < 0.05). Crossing over was reduced to a level that was indistinguishable from that observed in the
mlh1 strain. The observation that the mlh1-R273E-R274E protein, which displays reduced binding of DNA, is deficient for crossing over suggests that DNA binding may be important for crossing over during meiosis. Group II also includes mlh1p-N35A, whose N-terminal domain does not bind ATP, suggesting that ATP binding may also be important for meiotic crossing over. In contrast, ATP hydrolysis may be less critical, since the mlh1-E31A mutant strain has normal crossing over yet it encodes an N-terminal domain that binds but does not efficiently hydrolyze ATP.
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Meiotic mismatch repair efficiencies:
The effect of each mutation on mismatch repair efficiency during meiosis was determined by assessing the frequency of postmeiotic segregation events (phenotypic sectoring of the genetic marker) that result from failure to repair heteroduplex DNA (![]()
mlh1). The mlh1-A41F strain was clearly defective for meiotic mismatch repair of the his4-r allele whereas the data for the met13-2 allele were ambiguous. Strains with the mlh1-E31A, mlh1-P25L, and mlh1-R97A mutations displayed wild-type or near wild-type levels of repair at both loci tested (P > 0.025). Consistent with this, these three mutations have the lowest published mitotic mutation rates of the mutations analyzed (![]()
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mlh1 (P < 0.025) for repair at met13-2. The effect of the missense mutations on total frequency of non-Mendelian segregation varied with no obvious pattern (Table 3).
The crossover defect does not predict the degree of aneuploidy:
The crossover defect of
mlh1 has previously been shown to be associated with a moderate amount of nondisjunction (![]()
mlh1 strain. These strains have a disomy rate of 1.1% (10/908). This is significantly lower (P < 0.05, z-test) than that found in
mlh1 (5/131, 3.8%). In contrast, the crossover-proficient strains were indistinguishable from the wild-type strain (0/1066 vs. 1/970).
Nondisjunction contributes to gamete death:
Gamete death in
mlh1 strains is due to at least two factors whose relative contributions are unknown, aneuploidy and the accumulation of haplolethal mutations (including synthetic lethal mutations) that are uncovered by meiosis (![]()
msh2 and
mlh1 (Table 5 and Table 6). Since the
msh2 and
mlh1 strains have equivalent mitotic mutation rates, but
msh2 strains have no crossover or segregation defects (![]()
msh2 strain provides an estimate of the contribution of mitotically acquired haplolethals and meiotic repair deficiency to gamete death. Consistent with the previous report, the
msh2 mutant strain had viability intermediate between wild-type and
mlh1 strains. As might be predicted, the three mutant strains, mlh1-R97A, -E31A, and -P25L, reported to have moderate mutation rates (![]()
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msh2. However, the crossover-deficient strains fell into two classes. They were either
msh2-like (mlh1-M32R, mlh1-N35A, and mlh1-R273E-R274E) or intermediate between
mlh1 and
msh2. None were
mlh1-like except perhaps mlh1-G98V, which could not be distinguished from either
msh2 (P = 0.09) or
mlh1 (P = 0.06). This indicates that apparently equivalent crossover and repair defects do not translate directly into an equivalent defect in viability and suggests that Mlh1p may be playing a role in meiotic viability separable from its role in crossing over.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Meiotic mismatch repair generally reflects mitotic repair efficiency:
The efficiency of repair of meiotic heteroduplex DNA by the strains with missense substitutions is for the most part consistent with the published mutation rates. However, mlh1-I65N displays wild-type repair at one of the alleles studied despite high mitotic mutation rates. This allele-specific effect could reflect different functional requirements for repair of a single mispair compared to a four-base insertion or could reflect the position of the marker relative to the double-strand break, which initiates meiotic recombination. Current models for the repair of mismatches in meiotic heteroduplex envisage distinctly different fates for alleles close to the double-strand break and those far away (reviewed in ![]()
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Structure function relationships revealed by the missense mutations:
The results with strains bearing mutant proteins that have known biochemical defects (mlh1p-E31A, mlh1p-N35A, and mlh1p-R273E-R274E) begin to offer some insights into the importance of ATP binding, ATP hydrolysis, and DNA binding by Mlh1p for different meiotic functions. The observations that the N-terminal domains of the mlh1p-N35A and mlh1p-R273E-R274E substituted proteins have reduced binding of ATP and DNA, respectively, and the corresponding mutants are defective for crossing over and heteroduplex repair suggests that both substrate-binding properties of Mlh1p are important for these meiotic functions. From a comparison of the meiotic phenotypes of mlh1-E31A and mlh1-N35A and the observation that mlh1p-E31A is capable of binding but not hydrolyzing ATP while mlh1p-N35A does neither, we conclude that ATP binding is sufficient for executing the crossover functions of Mlh1p. This conclusion is supported by data from a similar study where it was shown that a mutation of E31 to lysine is recombination defective (![]()
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Other structural or functional inferences can be drawn from the phenotypic data. A comparison of our observation that the mlh1-R273E-R274E strain is crossover deficient with the observation that when the adjacent arginines are replaced with alanines the resultant strain is crossover proficient (![]()
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mlh1. This is not the case, as it falls into the class of mutants that have better viability and better disjunction than the deletion. As discussed below we interpret the improved disjunction and viability with respect to the deletion to mean that Mlh1p has a structural role in segregation. This inferred structural role seems to be fulfilled by the mutant protein encoded by mlh1-G243D.
The strains bearing mutations in the GFRGEAL box also fall into both groups. Two different substitutions for the same amino acid (e.g., G98A vs. G98V) result in proteins with differential effects on crossing over vs. meiotic and mitotic mismatch repair. Gly98 is in the GFRGEAL box that not only contacts the nucleotide but also is implicated in dimerization of the N-terminal domain upon ATP binding (![]()
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As discussed above, the conformational change associated with ATP binding is also thought to signal the effector molecules (![]()
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exo1 has a defect similar to that of
mlh1 in crossing over and segregation but has no defect in repair of mismatched heteroduplex, although total non-Mendelian segregations are reduced at some loci (![]()
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A structural role for Mlh1p in segregation?
Some of the missense mutations are as defective as the deletion strain for both mismatch repair and crossing over, yet have significantly better viability and less nondisjunction than the deletion strain. There are a number of possible explanations for the poor correlation between crossover defectiveness, nondisjunction, and viability. One possibility is that the intervals studied are not an accurate reflection of the crossing over in the genome as a whole. Possibly, the deletion of MLH1 is affecting another interval to a greater extent than the missense mutations and that crossing over in this interval is more relevant to segregation. Given recent suggestions that there are at least two types of crossovers in yeast, this is not an unreasonable hypothesis (![]()
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mlh1 strain and in a previous study (![]()
mlh1 strain as compared to some of the missense mutations is caused by the loss of the protein that impairs formation of a complex important for chromosome segregation but not exchange at the DNA levels. One possibility is that it is a component of the proteinaceous structure associated with chiasmata such as a "chiasma binder" suggested by ![]()
Implications for human fertility:
Our results indicate that Mlh1p has at least three meiotic functions, heteroduplex repair, crossing over, and chromosome segregation, that are separable from each other and from mismatch repair of replication errors in mitotic cells. To date, no infertility has been linked to MLH1 HNPCC patients, perhaps due to the absence of homozygous individuals or the rarity of loss of heterozygosity in the germline. The results presented here suggest that MLH1-dependent aneuploidy leading to reduced fertility would be specific to certain mutations. Hence not all HNPCC carriers would be at equal risk for fertility problems, which may be a reason why it has not been previously noted. Perhaps even polymorphisms in the general population may result in reduced fertility due to impaired crossing over. For example, three single-nucleotide polymorphisms have recently been shown to reduce the interaction between hMLH1 and hPMS2 (![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank M. Liskay for the GFRGEAL mutations, A. Aziz for preparing media, and E. Alani for sharing unpublished data. We thank E. Louis, C. Griffin, and the anonymous reviewers for helpful comments on the manuscript. We thank V. Cotton, B. Herbert, and R. Watson for technical assistance. This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust; E.R.H. was supported by a Prize Studentship from the Wellcome Trust.
Manuscript received September 24, 2002; Accepted for publication November 8, 2002.
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