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Characterization of rec7, an Early Meiotic Recombination Gene in Schizosaccharomyces pombe
Monika Molnar1,a, Sandro Parisi1,2,a, Yoshito Kakiharab, Hiroshi Nojimab, Ayumu Yamamotoc, Yasushi Hiraokac, Aniko Bozsikd, Matthias Sipiczkid, and Jürg Kohliaa Institute of Cell Biology, University of Bern, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland,
b Department of Molecular Genetics, Research Institute for Microbial Diseases, Osaka University, Osaka 565-0871, Japan,
c Structural Biology Section and CREST Research Project, Kansai Advanced Research Center, Communication Research Laboratory, Kobe 651-2492, Japan
d Department of Genetics, University of Debrecen, H-4010 Debrecen, Hungary
Corresponding author: Jürg Kohli, Institute of Cell Biology, University of Bern, Baltzer-Str. 4, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland., juerg.kohli{at}imb.unibe.ch (E-mail)
Communicating editor: G. R. SMITH
| ABSTRACT |
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rec7 is involved in intra- and intergenic meiotic recombination in all tested regions of the genome of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Segregational analysis in a rec7 gene disruption mutant revealed frequent occurrence of two-spored asci. Spores giving rise to diploid colonies were shown to derive from skipping of the second meiotic division. Nondisjunction of homologous chromosomes at the first meiotic division was also frequent. The cytological structures and processes, such as formation of linear elements, pairing of homologous chromosomes, and clustering of telomeres and centromeres, are regular in the mutant. Northern blot experiments revealed meiosis-specific expression of rec7. Screening of a meiotic cDNA library also identified transcripts from the opposite strand in the rec7 region. A Rec7-GFP fusion protein was localized in the nucleus of whole cells before karyogamy, during prophase, and after meiosis I. On spreads of prophase nuclei approximately 50 foci of Rec7-GFP were counted. Some of the observed phenotypes of the disruption mutant and the N-terminal sequence homology suggest that Rec7p is a functional homolog of Rec114p of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The observed phenotypes of the disruption and the appearance of Rec7-GFP in mating haploid cells and after meiosis I are consistent with Rec7p functions before, during, and after meiotic prophase.
MEIOSIS is an essential step in the life cycle of sexually reproducing organisms. It produces haploid gametes from diploid parental cells by two nuclear divisions following a single round of DNA replication. The first (reductional) division differs from the second (equational) division and mitotic divisions in several respects. In most organisms proper completion of the reductional division requires pairing of homologous chromosomes and genetic recombination. Homologous pairing is usually accompanied by the formation of a tripartite, meiosis-specific structure, the synaptonemal complex (SC; ![]()
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The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe is a haploid eukaryote in which mating and meiosis are induced upon nitrogen starvation. Cells of opposite mating type conjugate and the zygotes usually undergo meiosis immediately (zygotic meiosis). By transfer of zygotes to growth medium, diploid vegetative strains can be obtained and propagated. By withdrawal of nutrients (in particular, nitrogen) synchronous meiosis is induced in diploid cells that are heterozygous for mating types (azygotic meiosis; ![]()
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Meiotic recombination has been extensively studied both in fission yeast and budding yeast, which are the best-studied model organisms (for recent reviews see ![]()
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In fission yeast, segregation studies and isolation of recombination-deficient mutants are facilitated by the fact that S. pombe has only three chromosomes (![]()
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This study describes the genetic and cytological phenotypes observed in a disruption mutant of rec7. Furthermore, we clarified the gene structure and investigated rec7 expression in wild-type background. Protein localization was examined in whole cells and on nuclear spreads in meiotic time-courses using a Rec7-GFP (green fluorescence protein) construct. Finally, we discuss the results with respect to the possible roles of Rec7p in fission yeast meiosis.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Strains, media, and standard genetic methods:
S. pombe strains used in this study are listed in Table 1. All rec7::ura4+ mutant strains were constructed from SA4 by genetic crosses. Strains carrying the rec7::GFP construct were derived from SA14 by backcrossing with strains carrying rec7::ura4+ and the desired markers.
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The standard media and general methods were as described by ![]()
Crosses were carried out on MEA+5 at 25°. YEA+5 was used as a standard growth medium at 30°, unless otherwise indicated. EMM medium (modified Edinburgh minimal) used for complementation analysis of rec7::ura4+ was prepared as described by ![]()
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rec7 gene disruption:
Two gene disruption mutations were constructed (Fig 1). To create the rec7::ura4+ gene disruption, a 1.6-kb BamHI fragment from pYL45 (![]()
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Segregation analysis:
To study chromosome segregation in random spores, rec7 mutant and wild-type strains were crossed as described above. After overnight digestion of the crossing material with snail digestive juice (Société Chimique Pointet-Girard, Villeneuve, France) to inactivate vegetative cells, the surviving spores were plated on YEA+5 medium and incubated at 25° for 7 days. Then colony morphology was recorded, and the size (ploidy) of cells in the colonies was checked microscopically. Approximately 200 colonies per cross were streaked on YEA and YEA+5. YEA was used to reveal the state of chromosome III in the colonies (ade6 markers). YEA has a limiting amount of adenine, and adenine-dependent clones show pigmentation after 45 days of growth at 25° as follows: ade6-M210, dark red; ade6-M216, light red; ade6+ or complementing ade6-M210/ade6-M216 colonies are white. After 2 days of growth at 25°, the YEA+5 plates were replicated on appropriately supplemented MMA plates to check for lysine auxotrophy (lys1, marker of chromosome I), and twice on YEA+5 plates. To detect temperature-sensitive clones due to the tps13 mutation (marker on chromosome II), one of the YEA+5 plates was incubated overnight at 37°. The other YEA+5 plate was replicated on MEA+5 together with tester strains to determine the mating type of each clone. The full genotypes of the clones classified as diploid or aneuploid by the microscopic observation of cell size were determined after self-sporulation (h+/h- diploids) or after crossing with haploid wild-type tester strains of opposite mating type (h+/h+ and h-/h- diploids). In this way diploids (aneuploids) showing wild phenotypes (lysine and adenine prototrophy, temperature resistance) were checked for heterozygosity (presence of the recessive mutant alleles lys1-, ade6-, or tps13-).
Many asci with two spores were formed in crosses homozygous for rec7::ura4+. Thus the spores of such dyads were subjected to genetic analysis. After separation of the two spores by micromanipulation, their germination and division (or failure of germination or division) was recorded, in particular for those spores that did not form a colony. The clones deriving from the colony-forming spores were analyzed as described above for colonies deriving from random spores.
Isolation of cDNA clones, RNA extraction, and Northern blot hybridization:
To prepare a meiosis-specific cDNA library from S. pombe, we employed two kinds of diploid cells, CD16-1 and CD16-5 (![]()
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For RNA isolation CD16-1 and CD16-5 cells were cultivated at 28° in PM medium to logarithmic phase (OD600 = 0.6). Then the cultures were shifted into PM-N medium and incubated under the same conditions. Cells were collected at 2-hr intervals (012 hr), mixed with 10% SDS, phenol/chloroform, and RNA extraction buffer, and disrupted with glass beads (
= 0.5 mm). The samples were centrifuged and the supernatant was treated with phenol/chloroform and then with chloroform before precipitation with ethanol. The precipitate was dissolved in H2O and again precipitated in the presence of 2 M LiCl. Ten micrograms total RNA was loaded from each time point on an agarose gel. Northern blot analysis with 32P-labeled probes was performed as described by ![]()
Complementation of rec7::ura4+:
rec7+ and tos cDNA clones were amplified by PCR to introduce SalI and BamHI restriction sites at the 5' and 3' ends of the cDNAs, respectively. In addition, for rec7 the 5' primer contained the six nucleotides ATGAAC coding for the first two amino acids missing in the rec7#4 clone. The resulting fragments were cloned into the SalI-BamHI site of pREP41, a vector designed for moderate expression (![]()
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Construction of the rec7::GFP fusion:
The sequence coding for GFP-S65T (![]()
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Cytological procedures:
For meiotic time-course experiments established procedures were applied (![]()
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To observe the localization of Rec7-GFP in zygotic meiosis in living cells, meiosis was induced by transferring haploid, homothallic SA16 cells onto MEA sporulation medium. Plates were incubated overnight at 26°. The next day samples were scratched off the plate at different times and cells were stained with Hoechst 33342 (1 µg/ml, in water, for 10 min) and then resuspended in EMM-N medium and mounted on a coverslip. Zygotes in different stages of the meiosis were identified by the Hoechst staining. Images were taken with a computer-controlled CCD microscope system. A Peltier-cooled CCD camera (Photometrics Ltd, Tucson, AZ) is attached to an Olympus inverted microscope IMT-2. The microscope is controlled by a Silicon Graphics Personal Iris 4D35/TG. For further details of the microscope system see ![]()
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| RESULTS |
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Reduced spore viability and unusual ascus morphology in a rec7 gene disruption:
Mutants deficient in meiotic recombination show low spore viability, indicating the essential role of recombination for proper chromosome segregation during the first meiotic division and consequently for the generation of viable offspring. The rec7-102 mutation is probably a point mutation and severely reduces intra- and intergenic recombination throughout the genome (![]()
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To compare the spore viability of the gene disruption to that of the rec7-102 mutation, random spore analysis was carried out in crosses SA3 x SA4 and GP421 x GP431, respectively (Fig 2). The advantage of random spore analysis over analysis of tetrads (in rec7::ura4+ with varying morphology and numbers of spores) is that a representative sample of spores is selected for study without bias. Crossing of strains SA1 and SA2 served as a rec+ control. For the detailed genotype of these strains see Table 1. The spore viabilities of the gene disruption and of the rec7-102 mutation showed no significant difference (23 vs. 24%). This suggests that the rec7-102 point mutation leads to a null phenotype. Intergenic recombination in rec7::ura4+ was measured in two intervals by random spore analysis and scoring of about 200 viable spores. In the lys4-his4 interval the recombination frequency was 14.9% in wild-type strains (SA18 x SA19 cross, average of four experiments) and <0.5% in rec7 disruption strains (SA22 x SA23 cross, two experiments). For the lys3-ura1 interval 18.5% recombination frequency was obtained by crossing the SA20 and SA21 control strains (average of three experiments) and <0.5% was measured in the disruption mutant (SA24 x SA25, two experiments).
The morphology of rec7::ura4+ asci is frequently aberrant (Fig 3A and Fig B). They contain spores of variable size, and the arrangement of spores is frequently irregular. DAPI staining of asci shows rather unequal distribution of nuclear material between spores. Generally, the larger the spores are, the smaller is their number in the asci. The bigger spores contain more DAPI-stainable material than do the smaller ones. Fig 3C shows a quantification of rec7::ura4+ asci according to their spore number. In this experiment zygotic asci produced in SA5 x SA6 (rec7::ura4+ strains) and standard h+ x h- crosses were classified by their spore number. A similar phenotype was observed in azygotic sporulation of diploid rec7 disruption strains (data not shown). Asci with two large spores were abundant in rec7::ura4+ crosses. Their morphology suggested that they might carry diploid spores.
rec7 disruption strains frequently form spores giving rise to colonies with diploid cells homozygous for centromere markers:
The low spore viability and irregular ascus formation in the mutant imply a high level of chromosomal missegregation during the meiotic divisions. To gain more information, the segregation analysis described by ![]()
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Chromosome segregation was analyzed in random spores by crossing of SA7 with SA8 (rec+) and SA9 with SA10 (rec7::ura4+). The spores were plated on full medium. The morphologies of the resulting colonies (size and shape) were recorded as well as the size of the cells in the colonies: small cells are diagnostic for haploidy, large cells for diploidy. Then the full genotype of the cells of each colony was determined as described in MATERIALS AND METHODS. Table 2 shows the classification of colonies according to genotype (centromere marker patterns), cell size, and deduced ploidy of the spores that gave rise to the colonies.
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The control cross yielded uniformly medium-sized, regularly shaped colonies with small cells. Thus, the great majority of the spores were haploid. The only missegregations detected were three disomics for chromosome III (1.4%). In contrast, the size and shape of colonies derived from spores of the mutant cross were variable. As judged from microscopic and genetic analysis, most of the large colonies contained large diploid cells. Almost always the medium-sized colonies contained small haploid cells. Small colonies were shown to derive mostly from aneuploid spores. Haploid spores formed a minority (40%) among the meiotic products of rec7::ura4+. Most striking were the diploid colonies (large cells) homozygous for all three centromere markers (39% of the colonies). It was concluded that the original spores giving rise to this class were diploid. The second remarkable observation was the frequent occurrence of colonies with large cells (diploid) and segregation of colony colors, and/or heterozygosity for chromosome I, and/or heterozygosity for chromosome II markers (17%). These colonies were often small. It was concluded that they originated from 2n + 1 or 2n + 2 aneuploid spores. It could not be decided whether the original spores carried one or two extra chromosomes over the diploid chromosome set. For further interpretation see DISCUSSION. The frequency of missegregation in rec7::ura4+ is underestimated in this study, because the chromosomal configurations that allow survival, and thus experimental examination, represent only a fraction of the missegregation products.
Skipping of meiosis II and nondisjunction I in rec7::ura4:
Some of the types of chromosomal missegregation can be examined directly by dyad or tetrad dissection. The different segregation types are illustrated in Fig 4. Our genetic assay for chromosome III allows the detection of nondisjunction at meiosis I (Fig 4B) and also of precocious separation of sister chromatids (Fig 4C). Nondisjunction at meiosis II (Fig 4D) and chromosome loss (failure of attachment to spindle) cannot be diagnosed with our assay. The frequent occurrence of two-spored asci (Fig 3) and the high frequency of diploid and hyperdiploid spores (Table 2) suggested that for rec7::ura4+, dyad rather than tetrad dissection would be the more effective method for diagnosing segregation errors. Under the assumption that dyads result from omission of meiosis II, the middle row of Fig 4 shows the relevant configurations.
For this study, 85 dyads were dissected from the cross SA9 x SA10 (Table 3). The spores were monitored for germination and the growing colonies were analyzed for random spores as described in MATERIALS AND METHODS and above. From 42 dyads two colonies were obtained. In 39 dyads out of these 42, both spore colonies revealed homozygosity for all centromere markers. Obviously in these asci meiosis was interrupted after the first division (Fig 4A, middle row). From a single ascus one diploid colony showed homozygosity, the other diploid heterozygosity for all centromere markers. This may be the result of a rare triploid or tetraploid zygote undergoing meiosis interruption followed by chromosome loss during colony formation. Two asci yielded a haploid and a diploid colony, the latter homozygous for centromere markers. In these asci chromosome loss and interruption of the meiotic process might have occurred.
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In 23 dyads only one spore was able to form a colony. Nine of these spores were classified as aneuploids for chromosome III. The first three of them yielded three different diploid segregants upon restreaking the original spore colony: ade6-M210/ade6-M216 (white), ade6-M210/ade6-M210 (dark red), ade6-M216/ade6-M216 (light red). The siblings of these colony-forming spores were not able to divide (microscopic examination), most probably due to the lack of chromosome III. These dyads give direct evidence for nondisjunction I, combined with omission of meiosis II (Fig 4B, middle row). The colonies from six other spores were homogeneously white upon restreaking, but turned out to be heterozygous for ade6 after backcrossing (dark red and light red segregants). The sibling spores of three of them did not divide at all, whereas those of the three others divided at least once but were unable to form a colony. These six cases may derive from nondisjunction I or precocious sister chromatid separation (Fig 4C, middle row). The missegregation is again combined with omission of a meiotic division and subsequent loss of chromosomes during colony development. Four dyad spore colonies with heterozygosity for chromosome II (one self-sporulating tps13/+ clone) or chromosome I (three lys1/+ clones revealed by backcrossing) were also observed. The colonies from the remaining 10 dyad spores were either diploid (homozygous for all centromere markers) or haploid. They are not informative with respect to the nature of the missegregation events. For a full interpetation of the different classes of spore colonies see DISCUSSION.
Structure and expression of the rec7 gene:
A renewed analysis of the rec7 sequence revealed two putative introns and led to a 5' extension of the ORF (Y. LIN and G. R. SMITH, personal communication; Fig 1). To clarify the gene structure, a meiotic cDNA library [primed with oligo(dT)] was screened by colony hybridization for rec7+ clones. With a 1.2-kb BglII fragment of pUC18-rec71.6, 11 hybridization-positive colonies were identified by screening 2 x 105 colonies. Five independent cDNA clones were recovered (Fig 5) and their sequences were determined. All of them carried runs of A deriving from poly(A)-RNA at one end. The rec7#2 and rec7#4 cDNA clones correspond to the ORF of the rec7+ gene. Analysis of these cDNA clones confirmed the two introns in the 5' region. These clones carried exon I but did not fully extend to the putative initiation codon. The smaller cDNA clones tos1, tos2, and tos3 were interpreted to derive from transcripts of the complementary strand of the rec7+ gene (tos: transcript from opposite strand). They do not contain open reading frames longer than 110 amino acids.
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Complementation of rec7::ura4+ by rec7+ but not by tos cDNAs:
To test whether the rec7 ORF and/or the tos trancripts are responsible for rec7 function, complementation of the rec7 disruption by defined cDNA clones was attempted. Obviously, the deletion of the 1.2-kb BglII-BglII restriction fragment in rec7::ura4+ (Fig 1) should abolish or severely shorten the transcript with the rec7 ORF and also the tos1 and tos2 RNAs from the opposite strand (Fig 5). Expression of the tos3 RNA may still occur. Full-length rec7 cDNA and the tos cDNAs were cloned into the pREP41 vector (![]()
Localization of Rec7p in whole cells and on nuclear spreads:
To localize the protein in the cell, we tagged rec7 with the green fluorescence protein (GFP-S65T; ![]()
To observe the localization of Rec7-GFP in zygotic meiosis, strain SA16 (h90 haploid) was transferred to sporulation medium. Samples of living cells taken at different time points were first observed after staining with Hoechst dye for definition of the state of mating or meiosis. Then, images of GFP fluorescence were taken in 10 optical sections covering the whole nucleus and, after deconvolution, were projected into two dimensions. After mating of cells and before karyogamy Rec7-GFP foci were already visible (Fig 6A). Single foci were visible in the two unfused nuclei of the zygote. The number of foci increased up to three per haploid nucleus during karyogamy (Fig 6B) and then further in the horsetail nuclei (Fig 6C). At the end of the horsetail movement the number of foci decreased (Fig 6D), but small numbers of foci were clearly present after the first meiotic division (Fig 6E and Fig F).
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Another approach to study the expression and localization of Rec7p is indirect immunofluorescence on nuclear spreads of azygotic meiosis. Time-course experiments were performed with the h+/h- diploid strain SA17 bearing the rec7::GFP construct (Fig 7). Fluorescence microscopy revealed that Rec7p was localized to distinct foci within the nucleus (Fig 7A). No staining above background was observed when nuclear spreads of the untagged SA11 strain were probed with anti-GFP antibody in control time-course experiments (data not shown). The nuclei contained on average
50 foci at 6, 8, and 10 hr after meiosis induction (Fig 7B). At 12 hr the average number of foci decreased (27 foci per nucleus), suggesting degradation of the protein later in meiosis. Later time points were difficult to examine due to poor spreading of the sporulating cells. Fig 7C correlates the presence of Rec7p foci with the cytological landmarks of meiosis. Foci first appeared at 6 hr when the number of horsetail nuclei began to increase. The horsetail shape is a consequence of the intense nuclear movement during meiotic prophase (![]()
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| DISCUSSION |
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S. pombe is a highly recombination-proficient eukaryote whose meiosis shows some features not seen in many eukaryotes (see Introduction). Recombination-deficient mutants have been isolated (![]()
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The rec7-102 point mutation showed low spore viability and severely reduced meiotic recombination (![]()
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rec7 gene structure and expression:
By isolation and sequencing of rec7 cDNA clones, the existence of two introns at the 5' end of the gene was confirmed (Fig 1). The two cDNA clones missed a few nucleotides and did not extend to the predicted translation initiation codon (Fig 5). But expression of a cDNA clone completed with the missing nucleotides restored wild-type spore viability to the rec7::ura4+ disruption strain. This suggests that the nucleotide position 42 is the true translation initiation point (Fig 1). Sequence comparison with the corrected ORF showed a similarity of the predicted Rec7 protein to the Rec114 protein of S. cerevisiae (![]()
In addition, three cDNA clones derived from RNA transcribed from the opposite strand were sequenced (Fig 5). No ORF longer than 110 amino acids was found in the cDNA clones tos1, tos2, and tos3. None of the pREP41-tos constructs resulted in rescue of spore viability when transformed into the rec7::ura4+ disruption strain, while transformation with the completed rec7 cDNA resulted in full complementation. This shows that Rec7 protein is required for wild-type meiosis. The individual tos RNAs are not sufficient for rescue of the spore viability defect. Nevertheless, an in vivo function for the tos RNAs cannot be excluded.
Multiple transcripts were observed in a diploid wild-type strain undergoing azygotic meiosis (Fig 5). The longest transcripts, which are likely to extend downstream of rec7, may be related to the unusually long transcript reported by ![]()
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Cytological analysis of rec7::ura4:
Meiotic time-course experiments (azygotic meiosis) with wild-type and rec8 mutant strains of S. pombe for the study of nuclear structures were carried out before (![]()
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Intranuclear localization of the Rec7 protein:
The study of living cells carrying the rec7-GFP fusion and undergoing conjugation and zygotic meiosis resulted in an unexpected observation. The Rec7 protein was found to be present in the nuclei before karyogamy (Fig 6). At karyogamy up to three foci were detected in each haploid nucleus. This number corresponds intriguingly to the chromosome number in haploid nuclei. Multiple signals were found during prophase I (horsetail nuclei, Fig 6C). Before meiosis I occurred, the number of foci was reduced again. Some Rec7-GFP signals persisted after meiosis I (Fig 6F).
These observations suggest that Rec7 has an early function before meiosis and recombination. But this role is not essential, since rec7 mutants do mate and undergo zygotic meiosis. The early appearance of the protein could not be detected on nuclear spreads in meiotic time-course experiments of azygotic meiosis (Fig 7, see below). Differences may exist between zygotic and azygotic meiosis. ![]()
Spreading of nuclei leads to separation of Rec7 foci over an extended area (Fig 7). With the help of an anti-GFP antibody
50 foci were counted per nucleus. Observation of living cells (Fig 6) does not allow resolution of foci to the same extent. The frequency of spread nuclei showing foci correlated well with the percentage of horsetail nuclei at the different stages of the time-course (Fig 7C). Intriguingly, the number of foci corresponds well with the average number of 45 crossovers occurring in S. pombe meiosis (![]()
The role of Rec7p in chromosome segregation and meiotic divisions:
We analyzed meiotic chromosome segregation in the rec7 disruption mutant. Different defects in meiosis are expected to lead to different missegregation types. Absence of crossovers is expected to lead to random segregation of homologous chromosomes, resulting in the nondisjunction I missegregation type for some of the chromosomes (Fig 4B). Failure of sister chromatid cohesion leads to precocious separation of sister chromatids (PSSC; Fig 4C). These missegregation types can be identified in our segregation system, but nondisjunction at meiosis II (e.g., two identical copies of chromosome III, Fig 4D) and chromosome loss are not detectable by this approach.
Random spore analysis revealed the frequent occurrence of two irregular meiotic products in rec7::ura4+ that were not detected in the control (Table 2). A large fraction of the spores (39%) grew into large diploid colonies with first division segregation for all the centromere markers. We interpret these as direct diploid products of meiosis. A total of 17% of the colonies were mostly small due to slow cell division or frequent cell death, but carried diploid cells in their mature stage. The centromere markers showed mixed patterns: first and second division segregations for different chromosomes were observed in the same spore. We classify these spores as aneuploids and propose that they arose from the combination of either nondisjunction I (2n + 2) or PSSC (2n + 1) with the skipping of one of the meiotic divisions. These results, taken together with the frequent occurrence of two- and three-spored asci in the mutant (Fig 3B), suggest that in rec7 at least two defects occur frequently, one of which is failure of the second meiotic division.
Dyad analysis confirmed the frequent occurrence of normal meiosis I combined with skipping of meiosis II. In total, 46% of the dyads were of this type, containing two normally growing diploid colonies homozygous for centromere markers (Table 3). About half of the dyads with only one colony-forming spore were diagnostic of missegregation. The three genetically heterogeneous spore clones are best explained by nondisjunction I of chromosome III and failure of meiosis II. During growth of the resulting 2n + 2 spores the supernumerary chromosomes were then lost. The spontaneous loss of chromosomes from aneuploid genotypes during mitotic growth is well documented in S. pombe (![]()
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With lower frequency than for chromosome III, nondisjunction I was also detected for chromosomes I and II (Table 3). Disomics for chromosome III were demonstrated to be stable enough so that disomic colonies can be obtained (![]()
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While the occurrence of nondisjunction I was expected for a strongly recombination-deficient mutant, it was surprising to find frequent omission of meiosis II (30% of asci, Fig 3C). This was not the case in rec8 mutants, which produce only a low number of diploid spores (![]()
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Also surprising is the high frequency of dyads with two viable spores showing first division segregation for all three chromosomes (46%, Table 3). On the basis of random segregation only 12.5% were expected. This indicates that an alternative mechanism for meiosis I chromosome segregation not requiring crossover formation may exist in fission yeast. Mechanisms for achiasmate segregation of chromosomes have been described in other organisms (![]()
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The possible roles of Rec7p in meiosis:
There are no known sequence motifs in Rec7p that would shed light on its biochemical activities. The homology of Rec7p to Rec114p of S. cerevisiae suggests a conserved role for these proteins in the initiation of meiotic recombination. This is confirmed by the absence of double-strand break formation in a rec7 mutant (![]()
50 foci in the prophase nuclei (Fig 7). This number roughly corresponds to the number of crossovers per S. pombe meiosis (45; ![]()
| FOOTNOTES |
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1 These authors contributed equally to this study. ![]()
2 Present address: Novartis Crop Protection AG, Biochemistry, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Jürg Bähler for the GFP-S65T-containing plasmid. This work was supported by grants from the Swiss National Science Foundation, the Human Frontier Science Program and the Japan Science and Technology Corporation.
Manuscript received April 11, 2000; Accepted for publication October 24, 2000.
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