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Nonrandom Segregation of the Mouse Univalent X Chromosome: Evidence of Spindle-Mediated Meiotic Drive
Renée LeMaire-Adkins1,a and Patricia A. Huntaa Department of Genetics and Center for Human Genetics, Case Western Reserve University and University Hospitals of Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio 44106-4955
Corresponding author: Patricia A. Hunt, Department of Genetics, Case Western Reserve University, 10900 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, OH 44106-4955., pah13{at}po.cwru.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: N. A. JENKINS
| ABSTRACT |
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A fundamental principle of Mendelian inheritance is random segregation of alleles to progeny; however, examples of distorted transmission either of specific alleles or of whole chromosomes have been described in a variety of species. In humans and mice, a distortion in chromosome transmission is often associated with a chromosome abnormality. One such example is the fertile XO female mouse. A transmission distortion effect that results in an excess of XX over XO daughters among the progeny of XO females has been recognized for nearly four decades. Utilizing contemporary methodology that combines immunofluorescence, FISH, and three-dimensional confocal microscopy, we have readdressed the meiotic segregation behavior of the single X chromosome in oocytes from XO females produced on two different inbred backgrounds. Our studies demonstrate that segregation of the univalent X chromosome at the first meiotic division is nonrandom, with preferential retention of the X chromosome in the oocyte in
60% of cells. We propose that this deviation from Mendelian expectations is facilitated by a spindle-mediated mechanism. This mechanism, which appears to be a general feature of the female meiotic process, has implications for the frequency of nondisjunction in our species.
FIDELITY of chromosome segregation during the meiotic cell divisions is essential to normal reproduction. Thus, the high frequency of chromosome segregation errors during human female meiosis is an enigma. An estimated 1025% of all human pregnancies are aneuploid as a result of errors during female meiosis (![]()
Despite the incidence and obvious clinical importance of human aneuploidy, we remain ignorant of the mechanism(s) underlying meiotic nondisjunction. In large part, this reflects the difficulty in obtaining and studying human oocytes, which has hampered attempts to directly analyze female meiotic chromosome segregation. Some cytogenetic data on human oocytes are available; however, virtually all have been derived from analyses of "spare" oocytes retrieved from in vitro fertilization procedures, making their relevance to the in vivo situation uncertain (reviewed in ![]()
Is there reason to suspect that the incidence of monosomy and trisomy might be different? Transmission ratio distortion, i.e., significant deviation from Mendelian expectations, has fascinated geneticists for decades. Transmission ratio distortion can result either from genotypic influences that affect gamete function or embryo viability [e.g., the Drosophila Segregation Distorter system (reviewed in ![]()
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The most widely studied transmission distortion effect in female mammals is a variation on this preferential meiotic segregation, namely, the apparent nonrandom X chromosome segregation observed in the XO mouse. This segregation distortion effect has been recognized since the first breeding studies of XO mice were conducted in the early 1960s (![]()
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Cytogenetic studies conducted in the 1970s provided evidence of preferential retention of the X chromosome in the oocyte at the first meiotic division (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Production of XO female mice:
Oocytes from XO female mice and XX sibling controls produced on the C57BL/6J and C3H/HeSnJ inbred strain backgrounds were utilized for segregation analysis. The production of XO females on both genetic backgrounds relied on previously described mutations that result in a high frequency of failure of paternal X chromosome transmission, i.e., the presence of the structurally abnormal chromosome, Y*, on the C57BL/6 background (![]()
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Oocyte collection and in vitro maturation:
The segregation behavior of the X chromosome at the first meiotic division was evaluated in oocytes that had completed MI and were arrested at metaphase of MII. To obtain MII arrested oocytes, germinal vesicle (GV) stage oocytes were collected from the ovaries of 4-week-old female mice and meiotically matured in vitro. GV stage oocytes were liberated from the ovary by piercing antral follicles with 26-gauge needles. Oocytes were cultured in 10-µl drops of Waymouth's MB 752/1 medium (GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, MD) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and 0.23 mM sodium pyruvate, overlaid with Squibb mineral oil, and incubated at 37° in an atmosphere of 5% CO2 in air. Oocytes exhibiting a first polar body after 1618 hr in culture were fixed for analysis.
Fixation, immunofluorescence, and in situ hybridization of oocytes:
Prior to fixation, oocytes were embedded in a fibrin clot (bovine fibrinogen type IV, Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA; bovine thrombin, Sigma, St. Louis) attached to a microscope slide as previously described (![]()
To visualize the meiotic spindle for confirmation that all oocytes were arrested at MII metaphase, oocytes were incubated in a 1:2000 dilution of a primary mouse monoclonal antibody to acetylated tubulin (Sigma) for 1 hr at 37°, washed in 5% NGS/PBS for 15 min at 37°, blocked in 10% NGS/PBS for 45 min at 37°, and incubated in a 1:100 dilution of a Rhodamine- or Cy5-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (Accurate Chemical, Westbury, NY) for 1 hr at 37°. Following detection with the secondary antibody, oocytes were washed for 15 min at 37° and stored in 10% NGS/PBS until analysis. Immediately prior to analysis, oocytes were stained with 100 ng/ml propidium iodide and a coverslip applied with mounting medium (50% glycerol/4x SSC containing 0.1 µg/ml p-phenylenediamine) and sealed with rubber cement. The MII spindle and associated chromosomes and the chromosomes in the first polar body were visualized on a Zeiss (Thornwood, NY) Axioplan microscope or a Bio-Rad (Hercules, CA) MRC 600 confocal microscope.
Following immunofluorescence staining and analysis, oocytes were hybridized with the X chromosome-specific probe, DXWas 70 (American Type Culture Collection, Rockville, MD) as described previously (![]()
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Activation of oocytes for segregation analysis during MII:
To determine if nonrandom segregation of single X chromatids occurred at the second meiotic division, MII arrested oocytes were collected from the oviducts of superovulated females and artificially activated to induce completion of MII. Four-week-old XO and XX females produced on the C57BL/6 background were injected with 2.5 IU of pregnant mare serum gonadotropin (Sigma), followed 4448 hr later by 5 IU of human chorionic gonadotropin (Sigma). MII arrested oocytes were recovered from the oviducts
16 hr after the second injection, denuded of adherent cumulus cells by a brief exposure to 200 µg/ml hyaluronidase (Sigma) in culture medium, washed through two changes of fresh medium, and incubated at 37° in 5% CO2 in air for 23 hr. Oocytes were artifically activated by placing them in 7% ethanol in PBS for 5 min. Following ethanol exposure, oocytes were washed in fresh medium, incubated, and monitored at 30-min intervals for evidence of polar body formation. Oocytes were fixed at the first sign of polar body extrusion to capture cells at telophase, thus ensuring that the group of chromosomes being extruded in the second polar body was distinguishable from those extruded in the first polar body. Oocytes were fixed and immunostained as described above and only chromosomes positioned within the telophase spindle apparatus were scored as products of the second meiotic division.
| RESULTS |
|---|
Segregation of the univalent X chromosome during the first meiotic division:
We recently reported the results of MI segregation analysis of the univalent X chromosome from studies of intact MII arrested oocytes from XO females (![]()
21 = 11.9; P <0.005).
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Nonrandom segregation at MI is a feature of univalent X chromosomes on two different inbred genetic backgrounds:
To confirm the apparent nonrandom segregation behavior of the univalent X chromosome, we conducted a second, independent analysis of XO oocytes produced on the C57BL/6 inbred background. A total of 323 oocytes from XO females and 415 from XX sibling controls were analyzed (Table 1b). Intact segregation of the univalent XB6 chromosome (Fig 1) at MI was observed in 249 (77.1%) of the 323 oocytes from XO females; of these, the X chromosome was retained in the oocyte in 150 (60.2%) oocytes and segregated to the polar body in the remaining 99 (39.8%). This distribution is not significantly different from the previous data set (
21 = 2.08; P > 0.10) but is significantly different from Mendelian expectations (
21 =10.4; P < 0.005). In control oocytes, one X chromosome signal was present in the oocyte and one was present in the polar body in 406 (97.8%) cells (Table 1b), indicating normal segregation of X homologs at MI. In the remaining 9 (2.2%) oocytes, only one X chromosome signal was evident, indicating hybridization failure rather than X chromosome nondisjunction and suggesting a hybridization efficiency of >97%.
To determine whether genetic background diminished or eliminated the segregation distortion effect, we conducted segregation studies of XO oocytes produced on a different inbred genetic background. A total of 222 oocytes from XO females and 104 from XX sibling controls produced on the C3H inbred genetic background were analyzed (Table 1b). Unlike the univalent XB6 chromosome, intact segregation of the univalent X chromosome on the C3H background (XC3H) was not observed in the majority of oocytes. Of the 222 oocytes analyzed, intact segregation was observed in 97 (43.7%) oocytes and equational segregation in the remaining 125 (Table 1b). The difference in the frequency of intact and equational segregants on the two inbred strains was highly significant (
21 = 64.5; P < 0.005). Nevertheless, among oocytes in which the X chromosome segregated intact to one pole at MI, a segregation distortion affect similar to that observed on the C57BL/6 background was evident on the C3H background; the X chromosome was retained in the oocyte in 58 (59.8%) cells and segregated to the polar body in the remaining 39 (40.2%). The deviation from random segregation approached significance on the C3H background (
21 =3.7; P < 0.1) and the pattern of intact segregants was not different for the univalent XB6 and XC3H chromosomes (
21 = 0.19; P > 0.8). All 104 oocytes from control females exhibited normal segregation of homologous X chromosomes.
Segregation of individual X chromatids at MII:
To determine if the single X chromatid resulting from equational segregation of the univalent X chromosome at MI exhibited nonrandom segregation behavior at MII, we analyzed the behavior of single XB6 chromatids at MII anaphase. A total of 216 MII arrested oocytes from XO females were treated with ethanol to induce completion of the second meiotic division (Table 2). A total of 124 (57.4%) oocytes exhibited signs of second polar body extrusion and, of these, 71 were at telophase at the time of fixation and exhibited clearly distinguishable oocyte and polar body chromosomes. Sixteen (22.5%) of the 71 oocytes were the product of an equational division at MI and exhibited a single X chromatid signal either in the oocyte or the forming second polar body. This is consistent with the frequency of equational segregation observed in studies of MII arrested oocytes on the C57BL/6 background (Table 1b). Of the 16 cells in which a single chromatid was segregating at MII, 7 exhibited segregation to the oocyte (Fig 3, a and b) and 9 to the second polar body.
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X chromosome segregation was evaluated in 227 ethanol-treated control oocytes. Of the 113 oocytes that exhibited signs of second polar body extrusion, 69 (60%) cells were at telophase and in all 69 cells segregation appeared normal, with one chromatid segregating to the oocyte and one to the second polar body (data not shown).
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Nonrandom meiotic segregation of the univalent X chromosome was first postulated by Cattanach as the mechanism responsible for the excess of XX daughters among the offspring of XO female mice (![]()
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Unlike the previous cytogenetic studies, our analyses were conducted using molecular cytogenetic methods to study intact oocytes. This approach has several advantages over conventional cytogenetic techniques. First, it eliminates the technical artifact of chromosome loss. Second, the use of a FISH probe to repetitive sequences on the proximal part of the X chromosome allows us to distinguish a single X chromatid from an intact X chromosome and thus to differentiate the two patterns of MI segregation. Third, since both products of the MI division are present in all cells, scoring accuracy can be confirmed by the corroboration of results for the oocyte and the polar body.
To assess the question of nonrandom X chromosome segregation during MI, we first reanalyzed data from a previously published data set of 148 oocytes (![]()
The results of additional studies of X chromosome segregation in over 500 oocytes obtained from XO females produced on two different inbred strain backgrounds are remarkable in two respects: First, we observed a significant difference in the propensity for equational division of the X chromosome at MI on the two genetic backgrounds. Second, despite this difference, the segregation distortion effect for intact X chromosome segregants observed in our original data set was confirmed on both genetic backgrounds.
What is the basis of the difference in "intact" vs. "equational" MI segregation of the X chromosome between inbred strains?
Based on studies in other species, at least two explanations for the strain-specific difference in X chromosome segregation seem plausible: First, the difference may reflect structural differences between the two X chromosomes. In the budding yeast, Saccharomycies cerevisiae, centromeric sequences influence meiotic segregation (reviewed in ![]()
Alternatively, the meiotic segregation may reflect genetic factors that influence sister chromatid cohesion. During mitotic cell division, cohesion along the length of the chromosome arms is released at anaphase, allowing sister chromatids to move to opposite poles (reviewed in ![]()
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What is the basis of the segregation distortion effect?
The term "meiotic drive" was first coined by Sandler and Novitski in 1957 (![]()
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The segregation distortion effect that we have observed in oocytes from XO female mice is neither the result of postmeiotic selection nor is it a true case of genetically controlled meiotic drive. By analyzing intact MII arrested oocytes we have been able to unequivocally demonstrate nonrandom segregation at the first meiotic division; however, this meiotic disturbance is not a genetic effect mediated by specific elements on the X chromosome because (1) segregation distortion was observed on an inbred genetic background; (2) the effect was reproducable on a second inbred background; and (3) the segregation disturbance involves a univalent chromosome rather than a segregation distortion effect resulting from competitive segregation between different alleles. Indeed, this particular segregation distortion effect is similar only to the segregation behavior described for B chromosomes in several species (reviewed in ![]()
Several different meiotic drive models have been proposed to explain the high rate of meiotic nondisjunction in the human female (![]()
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Our observations suggest that at least one form of meiotic drive may not be mediated by specific chromosome structures, but may have a mechanical basis stemming from the asymmetrical nature of the female meiotic divisions. That is, despite the striking background effects on equational vs. intact segregation of the univalent X chromosome, the magnitude of the segregation distortion effect was virtually identical on two different inbred genetic backgrounds. Thus, we hypothesize that the effect that renders the intact X chromosome twice as likely to remain in the oocyte as segregate to the polar body at MI is not chromosome mediated but rather spindle mediated. Specifically, we propose that, in the event of a difference in pole "weight" (either as a result of the number of centromeres attached to a given pole or due to differences in the size of chromosomes attached to either pole), the "heavier" or dominant pole will be that directing chromosomes to remain in the oocyte cytoplasm. We suggest that, at least in mammals, a mechanism has evolved such that, in the event of a deviation from the normal process that results in an unequal number of centromeres, there will be strong pressure to retain more genetic material in the oocyte.
The predictions and implications of the dominant pole hypothesis:
If a difference in pole strength exists during mammalian female meiosis, it seems likely that a similar segregation distortion effect should act at both meiotic divisions. Our limited studies of the MII segregation behavior of single X chromatids provide little support for this model; however, as only 16 MII preparations were informative and as the presence of a single chromatid at MII is a highly aberrant situation, our data may be an inappropriate test of the model.
Other data from mammals, however, are consistent with our model. For example, previous studies of females heterozygous for chromosomes with HSRs in wild populations of mice suggest that preferential segregation of the HSR-containing chromosomes occurs at both meiotic divisions (reviewed in ![]()
Our hypothesis also predicts that structural aberrations that grossly alter chromosome size (e.g., some reciprocal translocations; HSR-containing chromosomes) or result in an unequal number of centromeres (e.g., Robertsonian translocations) should be subject to segregation distortion effects. In addition to HSR-associated segregation disturbances (![]()
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Although many structural abnormalities appear to conform to our model, many others show Mendelian segregation. Segregation in structural abnormalities, however, is almost certainly complicated by additional factors including the location of the breakpoints, the synaptic and recombinational behaviors of the chromosomes, and, in the case of Robertsonian translocations, the potential for one vs. two active centromeres. Additionally, since most mouse structural abnormalities are not maintained on an inbred background, the action of specific alleles that exert a drive effect is also possible. By analyzing the behavior of a univalent X chromosome on an inbred genetic background, we have eliminated all of these variables. Thus, we suggest that our studies have allowed us to detect a naturally occurring meiotic drive effect that is a by-product of the unique mechanism of spindle formation and the asymmetrical nature of the divisions in the mammalian female.
The dominant pole hypothesis has important implications for the origin of human aneuploidy. Direct analysis of human oocytes has been limited by the difficulty of obtaining suitable study material; hence, estimates of the rate of human nondisjunction are based largely on data on trisomies from clinically recognized pregnancies (i.e., spontaneous abortions, stillbirths, and live-births). Since autosomal monosomies are eliminated very early in pregnancy (before the time of clinical recognition), the overall rate of nondisjunction is estimated by doubling the values for trisomy. However, this assumes that monosomy and trisomy occur in equal frequency. The dominant pole hypothesis raises the possibility that this assumption is not valid. The question is, of course, complex; segregation distortion effects will almost certainly (1) differ for individual human chromosomes, (2) be influenced by recombination or the effect of modifying loci, and (3) differ for age-dependent and age-independent nondisjunctional events. The methodology that we have used to analyze intact MII-arrested oocytes from XO female mice provides a means of assessing the question of the role of nonrandom segregation in human aneuploidy. In the human, however, these studies are daunting, since the accumulation of sufficient data to assess a segregation distortion effect requires large numbers of human oocytes.
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
1 Present address: Section of Molecular & Cellular Biology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616-8535. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We are grateful to Terry Hassold, Joe Nadeau, and Michael Zwick for their comments on the manuscript and to Linda Woods for assistance in preparing the figures. These studies were supported by National Institutes of Health grant R01 HD31866 to P. A. Hunt.
Manuscript received March 6, 2000; Accepted for publication May 30, 2000.
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