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Meiotic Deletion at the BUF1 Locus of the Fungus Magnaporthe grisea Is Controlled by Interaction With the Homologous Chromosome
Mark L. Farmanaa Department of Plant Pathology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40546
Corresponding author: Mark L. Farman
Communicating editor: M. E. ZOLAN
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
The Magnaporthe grisea BUF1 gene suffers high-frequency mutation in certain genetic crosses, resulting in buff-colored progeny. Analysis of 16 buf1 mutants arising from a cross with a mutation frequency of 25% revealed that, in every case, the BUF1 gene was deleted. The deletions occurred in only one of the parental chromosomes and were due to intrachromosomal recombination. Tetrad analysis revealed that deletions occurred in 44% of meioses and usually affected both chromatids of the mutable chromosome. This suggests that they happen before the premeiotic round of DNA synthesis. However, they were also almost entirely restricted to heteroallelic crosses. This, together with the discovery of numerous repetitive elements that were present only in the mutable BUF1 locus, suggests that the deletion process is sensitive to pairing interactions between homologous chromosomes, such that only unpaired loci are subject to deletion. Given that karyogamy is not supposed to occur until after premeiotic DNA replication in Pyrenomycetous fungi such as M. grisea, this latter observation would place the time of deletion during, or after, DNA synthesis. These conflicting results suggest that karyogamy might actually precede DNA replication in Pyrenomycetous fungi or that parts of the genome remain unreplicated until after karyogamy and subsequent chromosome pairing have taken place.
FAITHFUL replication, recombination, and segregation of chromosomes during meiosis are essential for maintenance of genome integrity from generation to generation. Errors in these processes can lead to the inheritance of mutations affecting development and/or metabolism and can be lethal. The evolution of complex genomes with large numbers of dispersed repetitive elements increases the likelihood of these processes going awry, through provision of sites for template switching during replication and for ectopic recombination. Problems associated with the accumulation of repetitive elements are likely to be compounded during the sexual cycle, due to increased recombination levels in meiosis. This would be especially true when repetitive elements exhibit asymmetric distributions between homologous chromosomes. In these circumstances, homologous pairing interactions are presumably disrupted, creating an invitation for meiotic mayhem. A general prediction arising from this reasoning is that the meiotic process itself might be inherently mutagenic when acting on chromosomal substrates that do not allow efficient homolog pairing (![]()
Our current knowledge of the types of mutations that can result from erratic behavior of the meiotic machinery has come largely from studies of recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Along with a number of other ascomycetes, S. cerevisiae is well suited to such studies because the meiotic tetrad is retained in an ascus, which allows each product of meiosis to be analyzed. This can provide information on the frequency, timing, and strand specificity of mutational events and, hence, may provide clues to their underlying mechanisms. For example, analyses of meiotic tetrads obtained from a number of different specially constructed S. cerevisiae diploids reveal that most mutations arising during the S. cerevisiae sexual cycle occur after DNA replication and are a result of ectopic crossovers between duplicated genes or repeated DNA sequences (![]()
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In some organisms, the induction of a sexual cycle results in the appearance of mutant progeny at a frequency that is much greater than that expected from aberrations of normal meiotic recombination. In Drosophila, certain loci exhibit extremely high levels of meiotic instability as a symptom of the hybrid dysgenesis syndrome. The mutational events associated with hybrid dysgenesis are often premeiotic (![]()
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When studying de novo mutations that arise during the sexual cycle, it is important to consider that meiosis can also result in the appearance of progeny with mutant phenotypes without any mutation/modification event having taken place. Simple segregation of chromosomes with preexisting structural differences, such as translocations, can generate progeny lacking both alleles of genes residing on the translocated segment. In a haploid organism like Magnaporthe grisea, this could potentially result in 25% of progeny exhibiting a mutant phenotype.
Prior to this study, a genetic map of the plant pathogenic fungus M. grisea was constructed by mapping restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and classical genetic markers in a population of 61 random ascospore progeny from a cross between M. grisea strains Guy11 and 2539 (![]()
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The BUF1 gene has been shown to be mitotically unstable in some M. grisea strains, giving rise to spontaneous mutants at a frequency of up to 0.25% (![]()
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This study was initiated because I was impressed by the extremely high frequency with which the BUF1 gene was mutated in some sexual crosses but not others. A genetic map constructed using a cross between the two M. grisea strains used in this study (![]()
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Fungal strains:
The parental strains Guy11 and 2539 and 61 of their random ascospore progeny were used in the construction of a genetic map and have been described previously (![]()
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DNAs:
Overlapping cosmids A13-2-H and A22-7-E were kindly provided by S. Kang. These clones contain the BUF1 gene of M. grisea strain 4091-5-8, which is an ancestor of 2539 (![]()
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Genetic crosses:
Fungal strains were crossed by placing mycelial plugs 4 cm apart on oatmeal agar plates and growing them at 18° under constant fluorescent white light illumination. After 34 weeks, perithecial beaks emerged from within the zone of confluence between the colonies, indicating the onset of ascus development.
Isolation of random ascospores:
With the aid of a stereomicroscope, a scalpel was used to excise perithecial bulbs from beneath the surface of the agar in the zone of confluence. Bulbs were transferred to 4% water agar and cut open with a scalpel to release their contents. Asci were spread across the agar surface using a drawn-out and sealed glass capillary tube. After 16 hr, germinated asci were individually excised, transferred to fresh oatmeal agar plates, and grown until conidia were formed. The colonies were brushed lightly with a sealed pasteur pipette to pick up conidia, which were then spread across the surface of water agar plates. After 16 hr, a single, germinated conidium was isolated from each ascus culture. Colonies derived from these single spore isolates represent independent meiotic products.
Isolation of tetrad progeny:
Asci were spread across the surface of 4% water agar as described above. After 20 min, asci in which individual ascospores were discernible were massaged gently with a glass rod until they broke open. Using a drawn-out glass capillary tube, the eight ascospores were then spread out in a line. After 16 hr, agar plugs containing the individual germinated ascospores were excised with a scalpel and transferred to fresh oatmeal agar plates. Most of asci did not yield eight viable ascospores. However, when at least seven ascospores were recovered, it was possible to infer the genotype of the eighth spore from its mitotic twin (assuming postmeiotic segregation was low). Consequently, those asci containing at least seven spores were considered complete tetrads as they contained at least one representative of each meiotic product.
Southern hybridization analysis:
One microgram of each progeny DNA sample was digested with the appropriate enzyme. Aliquots (100 ng) of each digested sample were electrophoresed in a 0.7% agarose gel (BioWhittaker, Walkersville, MD). The gels were then treated successively with depurination, denaturation, and neutralization solutions (![]()
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-32P]dCTP, using an oligolabeling kit (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) for purified DNA fragments or a nick translation kit (GIBCO-BRL, Rockville, MD) for whole cosmids. Hybridization signals were imaged with a phosphorimager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech).
Molecular analysis of tetrad progeny:
Due to segregation of a number of factors determining colony morphology and the degree of pigmentation, in most cases it was possible to identify the four pairs of meiotic products. In these cases, molecular analysis was performed on only four members of the octad. Analysis of RFLP haplotypes for several markers was used to confirm that the four chosen spores represented a true tetrad.
| RESULTS |
|---|
Frequent appearance of buff-colored progeny in crosses between parental strains Guy11 and 2539 is due to deletion of the BUF1 gene:
A population of 61 progeny previously used for construction and integration of three M. grisea genetic maps contained 16 individuals (26.2%) that exhibited a buff colony color. This phenotype is characteristic of mutations at the BUF1 gene locus (![]()
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Segregation analysis of the BamHI RFLP identified by the BUF1 probe (Fig 1) revealed that 32 progeny had inherited the 2539 allele, 11 possessed the Guy11 allele, and 2 had inherited both alleles. The genetic map location of BUF1 in the Guy11 x 2539 cross is also near the rDNA cluster on chromosome 2 (Fig 2A), at a distance of 11 cM.
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Analysis of flanking markers revealed that 14 of the 16 buf1 progeny had inherited the RFLP markers on either side of the BUF1 gene from Guy11 (Fig 2B). A more detailed analysis of sequences flanking the deletion breakpoints revealed that this was also true for the two remaining progeny (results not shown). These results indicate that all the deletions had occurred in the Guy11 chromosome, suggesting that the BUF1 locus of Guy11 may have structural features that make it inherently unstable. The corresponding locus in 2539 appears to be relatively stable, as I have yet to recover any BUF1 mutations in the 2539 chromosome. If one assumes that the deleted loci should have been Guy11 alleles, this would have resulted in a segregation ratio of 27:32 (Guy11:2539 allele), which is not significantly different from 1:1 (
2 = 0.42, P
0.05), the ratio expected for single gene segregation in a haploid organism like M. grisea.
A possible explanation for absence of the BUF1 gene in
25% of random ascospore progeny is that it resides on a chromosome segment that has been translocated to a different chromosome in one of the parental genomes. However, the distribution of BUF1 genotypes in the random progeny population provided evidence against an interchromosomal translocation. Specifically, the observed ratio of 11:32:2:16 (Guy11 allele:2539 allele:both alleles:null allele) is significantly different (
2 = 31.13; P
0.001) from the 1:1:1:1 ratio expected of this type of translocation. In particular, the number of duplication class progeny was smaller than expected and the progeny with the 2539 allele were too abundant.
The meiotic stability of the Guy11 BUF1 locus is dictated by the homologous chromosome:
A preliminary analysis of the physical organization of the two BUF1 loci revealed an extremely high level of restriction site polymorphism (see below), which led me to consider the possibility that instability at the Guy11 BUF1 locus may be due to improper pairing between the homologous BUF1 loci. This hypothesis was tested by determining if buf1 mutants appeared at a lower frequency in crosses that are homoallelic for BUF1Guy11 (i.e., when both strains in the cross possessed the Guy11 BUF1 allele). For the crosses described below, none of the buf1 mutants were analyzed at the molecular level. Therefore, an assumption was made that the BUF1 gene was deleted in each mutant and, also, that only the BUF1Guy11 allele was affected. However, this assumption is reasonable because, in related studies, >150 buf1 progeny have been analyzed at the molecular level and all of them suffered deletion of the Guy11 BUF1 allele (Y.-S. KIM and M. FARMAN, unpublished results).
Unfortunately, fertility in the F1 generation was sometimes very low and not all matings yielded viable progeny. However, in three cases, the fertility was sufficient to be able to use a strain carrying the BUF1Guy11 allele as a common parent in both a homoallelic and a heteroallelic cross. In these cases, the BUF1Guy11 allele was highly unstable when in a heteroallelic condition but was transmitted perfectly through the homoallelic crosses. For example, 16 mutants were found among 61 progeny of the original Guy11 x 2539 cross; there were 7 out of 38 in Guy11 x 6005; and 9 out of 64 from Guy11 x 6008 (Fig 3). However, when Guy11 was used in a backcross with strain 6077, both BUF1Guy11 alleles were transmitted faithfully through meiosis and no buf1 mutants were recovered among 80 progeny analyzed (Fig 3). Similar behavior was observed for the BUF1Guy11 allele in strains 6000 and 6089. Pooling of data for all crosses according to whether they were heteroallelic or homoallelic for BUF1Guy11 showed that 57 buf1 mutants were recovered from 170 heteroallelic meioses (33.5%), whereas 291 homoallelic meioses yielded just 1 (0.3%). Therefore, heteroallelism caused a 100-fold increase in meiotic instability. No buf1 mutants were recovered in crosses that were homoallelic for the BUF12539 allele.
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The recovery of a single buf1 mutant from the Guy11 x 6089 cross was atypical. It is possible that this was a result of mitotic deletion in a sector of one of the parent colonies. A preliminary determination of the mitotic deletion frequency of BUF1Guy11 yielded one mutant in 765 asexual conidiospores (0.13 ± 0.26%, 0.95 confidence interval). Thus, the conclusion that a mitotic event may have given rise to the mutant in the Guy11 x 6089 cross is a reasonable one. Regardless of its mechanism, the frequency of deletion in the Guy11 x 6089 cross was very low compared to crosses that were heteroallelic for BUF1.
Extensive structural polymorphism between the BUF1 loci of the parental strains Guy11 and 2539:
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The two cosmids that contain the BUF1 gene (A132-H and A22-7-E) revealed many RFLPs between the Guy11 and 2539 BUF1 loci (Fig 4B). In fact, these loci shared very few fragments of identical sizes, suggesting that the physical organization of the BUF1 loci in the two parental strains is very different. In addition, A13-2-H hybridized to fewer fragments in DNA of the parental strain Guy11, revealing the presence of an ancestral deletion in the Guy11 genome. This was confirmed by hybridization with the overlapping cosmid 11-11-N (Fig 4A), which did not hybridize to Guy11 DNA at all (Fig 4B). The next overlapping clone, 4-1-E, did hybridize to DNA of Guy11(results not shown) and, therefore, appeared to define the left boundary of the region that is deleted in the Guy11 parent. However, detailed physical mapping studies have indicated that the sequences in the Guy11 genome that hybridized to 4-1-E are not contiguous with the sequences hybridizing to A13-2-H (results not shown), indicating that the deletion was not a precise excision and that a more significant rearrangement had taken place.
In addition to the obvious deletion, the molecular nature of many of the other polymorphisms between these two loci has been determined by sequencing a 100-kb region of DNA surrounding the BUF1 gene of Guy11. The region is peppered with transposon insertions, which constitute
50% of the DNA at the locus (results not shown). In contrast, the 2539 locus is apparently devoid of repetitive DNA sequences, as evidenced by the simple hybridization patterns shown in Fig 4B. In addition, a 20-kb segment of the Guy11 locus is inverted with respect to the orientation of the same sequences within the 2539 locus (results not shown).
BUF1 deletions are de novo events:
If most of the deletions occur in just one DNA duplex (i.e., in a single chromatid), the recovery of 25% buf1 would require a deletion event to occur in every meiosis. However, the actual frequency of deletion cannot be determined from random ascospores because it depends on the number of chromatids affected in each meiosis. Therefore, I isolated tetrads and calculated the frequency of deletion on a "per meiosis" basis, by dividing the number of tetrads containing buf1 progeny by the total number of tetrads analyzed.
Following meiosis in M. grisea, the four meiotic products undergo a mitotic division before the spores are delimited, resulting in an ascus containing eight spores (an octad). Tetrad analysis can be performed as long as seven spores are recovered, because then one can be sure that each of the four meiotic products has been sampled. Seventy-one complete tetrads (containing at least seven ascospores) were isolated. Of these, 31 yielded buf1 ascospores (Table 1), indicating that the BUF1 gene was deleted in
44% of meioses. However, in crosses between Guy11 and 2539, only 38% of the ascospores were viable. Consequently, only a small fraction (5%) of the total number of dissected asci contained seven or eight viable spores. Therefore, to be sure that the complete tetrads were representative of the majority of meioses with respect to BUF1 deletion, I also investigated the occurrence of buf1 mutants in a number of incomplete tetrads. The frequency of deletion in these tetrads was 48%. Thus, I conclude that the complete tetrads are truly representative of the majority of meioses, at least with respect to mutation of BUF1.
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Although segregation ratios among random ascospores suggested that BUF1 deletion was not the result of a segregating translocation, it was possible that such an occurrence was being obscured by distorted segregation and/or differential spore viability. To address this issue, I used Southern hybridization analysis with the cDNA probe to monitor BUF1 segregation in genomic DNA of tetrad progeny. If the absence of the BUF1 gene was due to its residing on a translocated chromosome segment, the tetrads containing buf1 progeny should also contain "duplication class" progeny that inherited both alleles.
Of the 31 "mutant" tetrads that were analyzed, 28 contained four wild-type progeny and four that were buf1 (Table 1). Molecular analysis of progeny from 20 tetrads showed that the BUF1 gene probe did not hybridize to DNA of the buf1 progeny (Fig 5A). Moreover, none of the 20 tetrads that were analyzed contained progeny that had inherited both BUF1 alleles. Instead, the wild-type progeny all showed a single hybridization signal that corresponded to the BUF12539 allele (Fig 5A). The tetrads that did not yield buf1 mutants exhibited the expected 2:2 segregation of BUF1 alleles, as illustrated by tetrads T73 and T75 (Fig 5A). In addition, analysis of the tetrad DNAs with several unlinked RFLP markers revealed that other loci were inherited normally (Fig 5B). These results confirmed that the majority of deletions were not due to the presence of a translocation and were not the result of unequal crossing over between homologs or sister chromatids. Instead, they were de novo events and occurred by inter- or intrachromatid recombination.
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In the case of the tetrads that exhibited octad ratios of 6:2 and 5:2 (gray:buff), deletion of BUF1 was apparently caused by unequal crossover, as duplication class progeny were also present in the tetrad and exchange of flanking markers was observed (results not shown). Also associated with these crossovers was a conversion of the BUF1 gene, as evidenced by the presence in these tetrads of three ascospores with the 2539 allele (i.e., tetrad T68, Fig 5).
As shown in Table 1, most of the mutant meioses segregated buf1 mutants in 4:4 ratios (gray:buff spores). This is consistent with the hypothesis that the deletions occurred before the premeiotic round of DNA replication. This was further tested by molecular analysis of deletion breakpoints in tetrad progeny. Cosmid A22-7-E, which spans one of the deletion breakpoints, was used to probe ApaI-digested DNAs of tetrad progeny. Genomic DNA of Guy11 revealed eight ApaI fragments that hybridized to the probe (Fig 6). The hybridization patterns in the buf1 progeny revealed two types of deletion. Mutant progeny in tetrad T52 were missing three of the eight fragments, whereas the buf1 progeny in tetrad T54 had lost six fragments (Fig 6). In 14 out of the 20 mutant tetrads that were analyzed, the buf1 mutants exhibited identical types of deletion. This is consistent with the deletions having occurred prior to premeiotic S-phase. However, the hybridization patterns seen in the 6 remaining tetrads revealed that the sister chromatids had experienced different-sized deletions (i.e., tetrad T76, Fig 6). This is indicative of deletions having occurred during or after replication. Meioses that did not result in the appearance of buf1 mutants showed normal (2:2) segregation of the Guy11 and 2539 RFLP patterns, as illustrated by tetrad T77 (Fig 6).
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Deletion of BUF1 occurs after fertilization:
In an attempt to define the earliest point at which deletion of BUF1 occurs, I examined the appearance of buf1 mutants in asci dissected from individual perithecia. In Pyrenomycetous fungi like M. grisea, all the asci in a perithecium are derived from a single pair of progenitor nuclei, one having come from each parent. The 200300 ascospores are created through a series of mitotic divisions with one pair of nuclei from each division entering into meiosis (Fig 7). It can be seen that, if deletion of BUF1 occurred before fertilization (i.e., before step A in Fig 7), this would result in perithecia in which all the asci contain buf1 ascospores.
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Small numbers of complete tetrads (seven or eight spores) were recovered from all five of the individual perithecia analyzed. Each perithecium yielded at least one complete tetrad, in which all ascospores were wild type (i.e., containing no buf1 ascospores). Two of the perithecia also yielded complete tetrads containing both gray and buff ascospores. In the remaining three perithecia, poor viability prevented recovery of complete tetrads with buf1 spores. However, in each case, incomplete tetrads with buf1 spores were obtained. These results revealed that all five perithecia contained asci that were wild type along with others that were mutant. Therefore, the deletion events must have occurred after fertilization.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
All of the buf1 mutations were deletions in the chromosome of Guy11. This instability appears to be a meiotic phenomenon as deletions were much less frequent during mitosis. These results are similar to those of ![]()
Molecular analysis of the BUF1 gene in mutant tetrads demonstrated unequivocally that loss of BUF1 was not due simply to segregation of a translocation but that its absence was caused by de novo deletion events. Surprisingly, de novo deletion of native loci is not often observed in the well-studied organism S. cerevisiae (![]()
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Southern hybridization analysis of the DNA region surrounding the BUF1 genes of the parental strains Guy11 and 2539 indicated that the structural organizations of the "homologous" BUF1 loci are very different (Fig 4). Nucleotide sequence analysis has shown that this is due to the presence of many repetitive elements in the Guy11 locus, none of which are present in the BUF1 locus of 2539 (M. FARMAN, unpublished results). The strikingly asymmetric distribution of repeated sequences explains the differential stability of the two loci. In addition, it indicates that deletion of BUF1 specifically in heteroallelic crosses is likely caused by mispairing between this locus and its homologous counterpart. If so, this mispairing would likely be during zygotene phase because observation of meiotic chromosomes in N. crassa indicates that mispairing is resolved during pachytene by a process of "synaptic adjustment" (![]()
Further evidence that mispairing is a factor in BUF1 deletions comes from the observation that deletions usually occur via intrachromatid exchanges. Such events are normally quite rare in S. cerevisiae, but occur frequently when homolog pairing is suppressed (![]()
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To my knowledge, the BUF1 locus is the first example of a chromosomal region whose instability is strongly influenced by its homologous pairing partner. I have named the overall phenomenon meiosis-associated deletion in heteroallelic repeats (MDHR). This acronym describes the salient features of the underlying processes, namely that they occur during the sexual cycle; they cause deletions; and they affect regions of heteroallelic, repetitive DNA.
The genomes of the parental strains used in this study differ widely in their repetitive DNA contents. Consequently, I expect that MDHR occurs at several M. grisea loci. Indeed, examination of RFLP segregation in the Guy11 x 2539 mapping population (![]()
The presence in a single perithecium of some asci containing buf1 progeny and others having only gray ascospores indicates that MDHR occurs sometime after fertilization. If MDHR occurs in the normal recombinogenic phase of the sexual cycle, only one chromatid should have been affected, resulting in two mutant ascospores (Fig 8A). Instead, the appearance of four mutant spores provides strong evidence that MDHR is initiated just before premeiotic DNA replication (Fig 8B). Otherwise, to explain the complete loss of the Guy11 allele from mutant tetrads, two independent deletions would have to occur, one in each of the "unstable" chromatids (Fig 8C).
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The presence of identical deletion breakpoints in sister chromatids (Fig 6) provided additional evidence that they occurred prior to DNA replication. Even in the asci that contained mutant ascospores with different-sized deletions, both chromatids were always affected, which suggests that these events were also initiated before premeiotic S-phase. In these cases, resolution of the recombination intermediate(s) appears to have occurred during or after replication, resulting in different-sized deletions in the sister strands.
Thus far, no premeiotic phenomena have been documented in the intensively studied yeast S. cerevisiae. In contrast, filamentous fungi such as N. crassa (![]()
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MDHR usually occurs before the DNA replication phase of meiosis, as indicated by the tetrad and deletion breakpoint analyses. However, its dependence on heteroallelism and the large differences in BUF1 locus structure suggests that deletion is triggered by mispairing between the homologous BUF1 loci. These data are clearly in conflict with the current model of Pyrenomycete meiosis (![]()
A number of models could provide a satisfactory resolution to this paradox. One interpretation of the data is that the current model of meiosis in Pyrenomycetous fungi is incorrect and that karyogamy precedes replication, as it does in S. cerevisiae (![]()
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Another explanation for the disparity in apparent timing of MDHR is that despite their initial appearance as premeiotic occurrences, BUF1 deletions actually happen after DNA replication (as illustrated in Fig 8C). However, analysis of the buf1 progeny in three tetrads suggests that this is not the case because, within each tetrad, the four buf1 spores exhibited identical mismatch repair patterns at the deletion breakpoints (M. FARMAN, unpublished results). This result is consistent with recombination having occurred prior to premeiotic S-phase.
A further possibility is that some genomic regions in M. grisea are not yet replicated when karyogamy occurs. This hypothesis is attractive, as it does not require too wide a divergence from the regnant model of the choreography of sexual development and meiosis in the Pyrenomycetes (![]()
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0.3% of the lily genome is not replicated during premeiotic S-phase, with its synthesis being completed after chromosome pairing has taken place (![]()
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A final model supposes that the triggering of deletion events does not actually require physical interaction of the BUF1 loci at all. Instead, a factor encoded by a gene in the 2539 genome may enter the Guy11 nucleus and induce deletions at the BUF1 locus. In this case, the factor should be encoded by a gene linked to the 2539 BUF1 gene, so as to explain the dependence of deletions on heteroallelism at the BUF1 locus. Current experiments are seeking to test the above models.
The mechanism by which MDHR leads to deletion of BUF1 appears to be quite different from other causes of frequent meiotic instability such as hybrid dysgenesis (![]()
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There are indications that processes like MDHR may operate elsewhere. Meiotic instability in other fungi is frequently associated with repetitive DNA and is correlated with the existence of structural differences between homologous chromosomes (![]()
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Even if MDHR occurs in other eukaryotes, there are reasons why it might not have yet been discovered. First, detection of heteroallelism-induced chromosome instability based on phenotype would be difficult in organisms that do not produce large numbers of progeny or in those for which controlled crosses are not experimentally feasible. Second, if the inherent deletion frequency of a particular locus is much lower than that of BUF1, it is unlikely that pairing-dependent instability would be detected, even in the most genetically tractable organisms. In this case, mutations would appear to be stochastic events, suggesting an indeterminate genetic basis. Another hallmark of the operation of MDHR is its apparent occurrence before DNA replication. For most organisms, it is not possible to establish the timing of recombination events because the four meiotic products are not retained in a way that they may be analyzed as a unit. Thus, meiotic chromosome instability in a number of organisms may also be initiated in the prereplication phase of the meiotic cycle but, in many cases, this would also be difficult to detect.
In conclusion, the M. grisea BUF1 locus, by virtue of its peculiar genetic behavior, may provide important insights, not only into chromosome instability during the sexual cycle, but also into the mechanics of meiosis itself. First and foremost, the indication that homolog pairing plays a role in the maintenance of chromosome integrity proffers a new paradigm for meiotic chromosome instability. Due to its unusual hallmarks, it is possible that MDHR or related processes operate in many organisms without having been discovered. If true, it is possible that some of the de novo mutations that arise in the germline of higher eukaryotes do so because the meiotic machinery operates inappropriately on mispaired and/or unreplicated chromosome regions. Alternatively, these mutations could reflect the activity of repair processes that deal specifically with these occurrences. In any case, this notion is quite different from the commonly held belief that de novo germline mutations arise by chance or are the results of chemical or environmental insults to gametogenic tissues or their products (![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
I acknowledge M. Olmstead and D. Thornbury for technical assistance with parts of this work. I thank S. Kang for cosmid clones; L. Vaillancourt, S. Ghabrial, and P. Mirabito for critical reading of the manuscript; and W. Engels, R. Aramayo, R. Metzenberg, E. Selker, and M. E. Zolan for stimulating discussions. I also thank the manuscript reviewers for providing very useful insights. This work was supported in part by a March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation grant FY98-0749 and by HATCH grant KY012009 from the Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station (KAES). This is KAES publication 00-12-138.
Manuscript received August 3, 2000; Accepted for publication October 9, 2001.
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