Genetics, Vol. 164, 81-94, May 2003, Copyright © 2003

The Mus81/Mms4 Endonuclease Acts Independently of Double-Holliday Junction Resolution to Promote a Distinct Subset of Crossovers During Meiosis in Budding Yeast

Teresa de los Santos1,a, Neil Hunter1,b, Cindy Leea, Brittany Larkina, Josef Loidlc, and Nancy M. Hollingswortha
a Institute for Cell and Developmental Biology, Biochemistry and Cell Biology, State University of New York, Stony Brook, New York 11794-5215,
b Center for Genetics and Development, Departments of Microbiology and Molecular and Cellular Biology, Division of Biological Sciences, University of California, Davis, California 95616-8665
c Cytology and Genetics, Institute of Botany, University of Vienna, A-1030, Vienna, Austria

Corresponding author: Nancy M. Hollingsworth, 314 Life Sciences Bldg., SUNY, Stony Brook, NY 11794-5215., nhollin{at}notes.cc.sunysb.edu (E-mail)

Communicating editor: A. P. MITCHELL


*  ABSTRACT
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Current models for meiotic recombination require that crossovers derive from the resolution of a double-Holliday junction (dHJ) intermediate. In prokaryotes, enzymes responsible for HJ resolution are well characterized but the identification of a eukaryotic nuclear HJ resolvase has been elusive. Indirect evidence suggests that MUS81 from humans and fission yeast encodes a HJ resolvase. We provide three lines of evidence that Mus81/Mms4 is not the major meiotic HJ resolvase in S. cerevisiae: (1) MUS81/MMS4 is required to form only a distinct subset of crossovers; (2) rather than accumulating, dHJ intermediates are reduced in an mms4 mutant; and (3) expression of a bacterial HJ resolvase has no suppressive effect on mus81 meiotic phenotypes. Our analysis also reveals the existence of two distinct classes of crossovers in budding yeast. Class I is dependent upon MSH4/MSH5 and exhibits crossover interference, while class II is dependent upon MUS81/MMS4 and exhibits no interference. mms4 specifically reduces crossing over on small chromosomes, which are known to undergo less interference. The correlation between recombination rate and degree of interference to chromosome size may therefore be achieved by modulating the balance between class I/class II crossovers.


DURING meiosis, homologous chromosomes become physically connected by the formation of chiasmata. These connections are crucial for the accurate segregation of homologs to opposite poles at the first meiotic division (BASCOM-SLACK et al. 1997 Down). Chiasma formation involves reciprocal recombination, or crossing over, between homologous chromosomes. Examination of crossover distribution indicates that the processes involved are highly regulated. First, every chromosome pair receives at least one exchange, the obligatory event required for faithful segregation, and second, when multiple crossovers are present, they are more widely spaced than predicted for a random distribution, a phenomenon known as positive crossover interference (JONES 1984 Down). In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the DNA events of meiotic recombination have been described using physical assays. Meiotic recombination is initiated via programmed double-strand breaks (DSBs; KEENEY 2001 Down). The ends of a DSB are resected on their 5'-strands to produce 3'-single-stranded tails, which then interact sequentially with a homologous chromosome to produce a single-end invasion (SEI) and then a double-Holliday junction (dHJ; SCHWACHA and KLECKNER 1995 Down; HUNTER and KLECKNER 2001 Down). The formation of dHJs and their resolution by structure-specific endonucleases are central posits of contemporary models of meiotic recombination (SZOSTAK et al. 1983 Down). While a number of gene products have been implicated in the formation of DSBs, SEIs, and dHJs (e.g., SCHWACHA and KLECKNER 1995 Down; HUNTER and KLECKNER 2001 Down; KEENEY 2001 Down), to date, a gene(s) encoding a meiotic HJ resolvase in S. cerevisiae has yet to be identified.

Recently two groups have proposed that Mus81 is a part of a eukaryotic HJ resolvase (BODDY et al. 2001 Down; CHEN et al. 2001 Down). Mus81 is an evolutionarily conserved endonuclease with homology to the XPF/Rad1 proteins that function in nucleotide excision repair (HABER and HEYER 2001 Down). Genetic data have been interpreted as evidence that MUS81 has a role in the processing of stalled replication forks in mitotically dividing cells, perhaps via the resolution of HJs formed via fork regression. For example, in Schizosaccharomyces pombe and S. cerevisiae, mus81 is synthetically lethal with rqh1 and sgs1, the respective RecQ helicase homologs of each species (BODDY et al. 2000 Down; MULLEN et al. 2001 Down). Genetic data have also been used to argue that MUS81 functions as a HJ resolvase during meiosis in S. pombe: mus81 cells induced to undergo meiosis produce highly inviable spores and this phenotype can be partially suppressed by expression of a bacterial HJ resolvase (BODDY et al. 2001 Down).

Mus81 from both yeasts forms a complex with a second protein that is required for nuclease activity in vitro (Eme1 for S. pombe and Mms4 for S. cerevisiae; BODDY et al. 2001 Down; KALIRAMAN et al. 2001 Down). These results likely reflect the requirement for a heterodimeric complex in vivo as mus81 eme1 and mus81 mms4 are phenotypically identical to either single mutant for all of the vegetative phenotypes that have been examined, as well as for meiotic spore viability (BODDY et al. 2001 Down; DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down; MULLEN et al. 2001 Down). Phenotypic analysis of mms4 diploids during meiosis demonstrated only a modest reduction in crossing over, suggesting that, in S. cerevisiae, meiotic HJ resolution is mostly independent of MMS4 (DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down). Because Mms4 and Eme1 are at best weakly homologous, the possibility exists that MUS81 functions in S. cerevisiae meiosis as an MMS4-independent HJ resolvase. In fact, HJ cutting activity has been observed in vitro for the Mus81 homolog, Rad1, in the absence of its partner protein, Rad10 (HABRAKEN et al. 1994 Down).

To test whether MUS81 and MMS4 function together in meiosis, and to further investigate the meiotic roles for these gene products, mus81 diploids were compared with isogenic mms4 and mus81 mms4 strains for a variety of meiotic phenotypes. Our data confirm that MUS81 and MMS4 act in the same pathway for meiotic recombination, presumably as a protein complex. Unexpectedly, we find that MMS4 is required for only a subset of crossovers that appear to be more prominent between short chromosomes. In addition, crossovers are distributed normally along chromosomes in an mms4 mutant, indicating that crossovers subject to interference do not require MUS81/MMS4. mus81 phenotypes are not suppressed by the expression of the bacterial HJ resolvase, rusA, and physical monitoring of DNA events indicates that dHJ intermediates are reduced in the absence of MMS4. These data strongly argue that dHJ resolution in budding yeast does not require MUS81/MMS4.


*  MATERIALS AND METHODS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Plasmids:
Plasmids were constructed by standard procedures (MANIATIS et al. 1982 Down) using the Escherichia coli strain BSJ72. The MEK1p-NLS-rusA-D70N-2HA allele was constructed by first amplifying the NLS-rusA-D70N-2HA gene from pREP-rusA-D70N (generously provided by P. Russell, Scripps Research Institute), using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR; BODDY et al. 2001 Down). A SalI site was engineered after the stop codon of the gene. The resulting fragment was digested with NdeI and SalI and ligated to NdeI/SalI-digested pDW14 to make pNH246 (DE LOS SANTOS and HOLLINGSWORTH 1999 Down). Site-directed mutagenesis (Quikchange kit, Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) was used to restore the aspartic acid at position 70 to generate a wild-type rusA allele in pNH246wt. To ensure that no mutations were introduced by the PCR, the entire open reading frame (ORF) and MEK1 promoter fragment were sequenced (Center for the Analysis and Synthesis of Macromolecules, SUNY, Stony Brook, NY). The SGS1p-rusA plasmid, pKR6980, was generously provided by Steve Brill (Rutgers University). To clone MUS81, a 3.4-kb fragment containing the MUS81 gene with 1 kb of upstream and 0.5 kb of downstream sequences was amplified from genomic DNA. The fragment was digested with SalI and BamHI (engineered by PCR) and ligated into either pRS316 or pRS315 to make pCL2 and pCL3, respectively. Site-directed mutagenesis changing the aspartic acids at positions 414 and 415 to alanine was performed using pCL2 to make mus81-DD. The mus81{Delta}::ARG4 mutation was constructed by first subcloning a 2.9-kb BamHI/HindIII fragment from pCL4 into BamHI/SalI pRS305 to make pDT6. A 1.3-kb BglII fragment within MUS81 was substituted for a 3.3-kb BamHI PCR fragment containing ARG4 to make pDT8.

Yeast strains:
Liquid and solid media were as described (VERSHON et al. 1992 Down; DE LOS SANTOS and HOLLINGSWORTH 1999 Down). All yeast strains are derived from the SK1 strain background. The following strains are homozygous isogenic derivatives of NH144:

  • NH371, mus81{Delta}::kanMX4; NH274F, mms4{Delta}::hisG; NH416, red1::LEU2 mus81{Delta}::kanMX4; NH396, mek1{Delta}::LEU2 mus81{Delta}::kanMX4; NH372F, mms4{Delta}::hisG mus81{Delta}::kanMX4.

The following are homozygous isogenic derivatives of NKY1551:

  • NH301, mms4{Delta}::kanMX4; NH428, mus81{Delta}::ARG4; NH445, mus81{Delta}::ARG4 mms4{Delta}::kanMX4.

The following is an isogenic derivative of NHY290:

NHY1155, mms4{Delta}::hphMX4.

The following are isogenic derivatives of NHY1296:

  • NHY1297, msh5{Delta}::kanMX4; NHY1298, mms4{Delta}::hphMX4; NHY1299, msh5{Delta}::kanMX4 mms4{Delta}::hphMX4.

The following is an isogenic derivative of NHY957:

  • NH455, mms4{Delta}::kanMX4.

Alleles marked with kanMX4 were disrupted by PCR using the method of LONGTINE et al. 1998 Down. The mus81{Delta}::ARG4 allele was introduced by transformation of a BamHI/XhoI fragment purified from pDT8. All gene disruptions were confirmed by Southern blot analysis (data not shown). Details of strain constructions are available upon request.

Time courses:
Cells were sporulated as described in DE LOS SANTOS and HOLLINGSWORTH (1999). Meiotic progression was monitored by fixing cells with 3.7% formaldehyde and staining them with 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) as described in WOLTERING et al. 2000 Down. Sporulation was assessed by examining 200 cells using light microscopy to determine the number of mature asci. For analysis of DSBs and crossovers, DNA was digested in plugs as described in WOLTERING et al. 2000 Down. The gels were prepared for hybridization and probed as described (MCKEE and KLECKNER 1997 Down). The DSB fragments and crossover bands were quantitated as described in WOLTERING et al. 2000 Down. Joint molecule analysis was carried out as described (SCHWACHA and KLECKNER 1994 Down; HUNTER and KLECKNER 2001 Down). Electron microscopic analysis of spread chromosomes was performed as described in WOLTERING et al. 2000 Down.


*  RESULTS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Mus81 triggers the meiotic recombination checkpoint by the formation of unprocessed recombination intermediates:
Similar to mms4, the sporulation defect of mus81 has previously been shown in the W303 genetic background to be due to a block in prophase (MULLEN et al. 2001 Down). This result, in conjunction with the observation that the spore viability of a mus81 mms4 diploid resembles that of either mus81 or mms4 alone (DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down), suggests that Mus81p and Mms4p function together in meiotic cells. In SK1 strains the meiotic arrests exhibited by mus81 and mms4 are not complete, thereby allowing a genetic test for gene interaction. The mus81 mms4 diploid sporulated at 33° exhibited a similar number of arrested cells as mus81 or mms4 alone, indicating that the two genes act on the same pathway for meiotic progression (Fig 1A). Furthermore, the number of mature asci produced by the double mutant was no more severe than that of either single mutant (wild type, 73.2% ± 3.7; mus81, 2.2% ± 1.5; mms4, 3.8% ± 2.2; mus81 mms4, 1.3% ± 1.0; n = 3). These observations support the idea that a complex containing Mus81 and Mms4 is necessary for meiotic progression and sporulation.



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Figure 1. Time-course analyses of mus81 diploids. Isogenic SK1 diploids were transferred to sporulation medium and shifted to 33° (NH144, wild type; NH371, mus81; NH274F, mms4; NH372F, mus81 mms4; NH416, red1 mus81; NH396, mek1 mus81). (A) Meiotic progression for mus81 and mus-81 mms4. Cells were fixed and stained with DAPI and examined by fluorescence microscopy. Binucleate cells were classified as MI, tetranucleate cells as MII. A total of 200 cells were counted for each strain at each time point. (B) Meiotic progression for red1 mus81 and mek1 mus81. (C) Recombination between leu2 heteroalleles. Appropriate dilutions of each diploid from each time point were plated onto -leu and YPAD media, respectively. The number of Leu+ prototrophs was normalized to the total number of viable cells. (D) Cell viability. The viability of each diploid at each time point was normalized to the viability at the 0 time point for that strain. A, C, and D are from the same time course and represent the average of three independent colonies. B represents a separate time course in which the average of two single colonies for each strain was plotted.

In both S. cerevisiae and S. pombe, the mus81 sporulation and spore viability defects are dependent upon the initiation of recombination (BODDY et al. 2001 Down; KALIRAMAN et al. 2001 Down). It is therefore likely that the mus81 arrest is due to the presence of aberrant or unprocessed recombination intermediates triggering the meiotic recombination checkpoint (reviewed in ROEDER and BAILIS 2000 Down). This hypothesis was tested by assaying meiotic progression in mus81 strains in which meiosis-specific components of the checkpoint were mutated. RED1 and MEK1 encode proteins that localize to chromosome cores, which, in addition to synapsis and recombination, are required for the meiotic recombination checkpoint (SMITH and ROEDER 1997 Down; XU et al. 1997 Down; BAILIS and ROEDER 1998 Down). Mutation of RED1 completely suppressed the meiotic progression defect of mus8. mek1 also permitted meiotic progression of mus81 cells, although in this case the suppression was only partial (Fig 1B). Mutation of the PCH2 gene has no effect on spore viability but suppresses or partially suppresses the prophase arrest/delay caused by zip1, dmc1, and mms4 (SAN-SEGUNDO and ROEDER 1999 Down; DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down). Deletion of PCH2 partially suppressed the prophase arrest/delay observed for mus81 without improving spore viability (data not shown).

mus81 diploids exhibit high levels of meiotic heteroallelic recombination but decreased cell viability in return-to-growth experiments:
The ability of mus81 and mus81 mms4 cells to undergo meiotic recombination between leu2 heteroalleles was analyzed by assaying the formation of Leu+ prototrophs as a function of time in sporulation medium. Isogenic wild-type and mms4 diploids were included as controls. In all four strains, the frequency of Leu+ prototrophs peaked at 6 hr, although the absolute number of prototrophs was reduced two to fourfold in the three mutant diploids (Fig 1C). By 24 hr, the mutants exhibited five to sevenfold fewer prototrophs than did wild type. This experiment indicates that heteroduplex formation is occurring at high frequency in the mutant strains and that there is no synergistic effect on prototroph formation in the absence of both MUS81 and MMS4.

When cells are returned to growth, meiotically induced DSBs must be repaired if cells are to be viable (ARBEL et al. 1999 Down). The mus81 and mms4 diploids each exhibited a 10-fold decrease in cell viability in return-to-growth experiments, suggesting a role for these genes in DSB repair under return-to-growth conditions (Fig 1D). Alternatively, the lethality could arise if cells try to progress through meiosis I (MI) with unrepaired chromosomes. To distinguish between these two possibilities, cell viability in meiotic time courses of mus81 in the presence of ndt80 was measured. NDT80 encodes a transcription factor required for progression through MI (XU et al. 1995 Down; CHU and HERSKOWITZ 1998 Down). In return-to-growth experiments, cell viability is still reduced by mus81 in the presence of ndt80, demonstrating that meiotic progression is not the source of the lethality (data not shown).

The mus81 mms4 diploid showed a synergistic 59-fold decrease in viability compared to that of either single mutant (Fig 1D). This decrease in cell viability, presumably as a result of being unable to repair meiotically induced DSBs under return-to-growth conditions, is the only phenotype yet discovered that indicates that MMS4 and MUS81 may have independent function(s).

MUS81/MMS4 affect only a subset of crossovers in S. cerevisiae:
Genetic and physical assays were used to assess the effect of mus81 and mms4 on the formation of meiotic crossovers. An SK1 mus81 diploid (NH371) was sporulated at 30° and 1357 tetrads were dissected. Spore viability was 40.5%, consistent with previous results (INTERTHAL and HEYER 2000 Down; DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down). Similar to mms4, the distribution of viable spores in tetrads resembles a random pattern (except for slightly more four- and zero-viable-spore tetrads than expected) and is not indicative of meiosis I nondisjunction (DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down; data not shown). Tetrads producing four viable spores were examined for crossovers between HIS4 and MAT and for gene conversion at HIS4, LEU2, and ARG4. A small (1.6-fold), but statistically significant, decrease in crossovers was observed in the mus81 diploid (Table 1). Gene conversion was elevated at all three loci, but the increase was statistically significant only at HIS4. These results strongly resemble those observed for mms4 in the isogenic background (Table 1).


 
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Table 1. Recombination in mus81 and mms4 SK1 diploids

In the isogenic strains used for the experiment described above, only a single interval can be analyzed for crossovers. A more thorough analysis of the effects of mms4 on recombination was therefore undertaken using a diploid SK1 strain, NHY957, that is multiply marked on three different chromosomes. The wild-type and mms4 diploids were sporulated at 30° and produced 93.2% (499 asci) and 45.4% (2849) viable spores, respectively. Tetrad analysis suggests a correlation between chromosome size and the effect of mms4 on crossing over in four-viable-spore asci (Fig 2). Overall, crossing over in the intervals analyzed along chromosome III (~330 kb) is reduced 1.5-fold relative to wild-type levels; on chromosome VIII (~580 kb) and VII (~1040 kb), crossing over is reduced 1.3- and 1.1-fold, respectively (Fig 2). When analyzed individually, all of the intervals on chromosome III as well as one interval on chromosome VIII exhibited a statistically significant, 1.4- to 1.7-fold decrease in the number of crossovers (Table 2). In contrast, the reductions in crossing over in the three intervals on chromosome VII were not significantly different from wild type. In addition, 6 out of 11 loci displayed significant increases in gene conversion (Table 2).




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Figure 2. Crossover distribution in wild-type and mms4{Delta} tetrads. (A) Physical maps of test intervals. Gene order, relative interval size, and overall size of the chromosomes are shown. Shaded circles indicate centromere location; arrowheads represent telomeres. (B) Crossover frequency in mms4{Delta} as a function of chromosome size. Each data point represents the sum of the individual map distances for each chromosome, expressed as a percentage of the wild-type value.


 
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Table 2. Gene conversion and crossing over in wild-type and mms4 SK1 diploids

Crossover distribution in mms4 mutants:
MMS4 is required for the formation of a subset of crossovers that appear to be more conspicuous along short chromosomes. To further characterize this phenomenon, we examined crossover distribution in tetrads producing four viable spores from wild-type and mms4 strains. The intensity of interference between adjacent crossovers can be measured in two ways: (1) the coefficient of coincidence, which is defined as the number of double crossovers (DCOs) observed divided by the number expected in the absence of interference (STURTEVANT 1913 Down; MULLER 1916 Down) and (2) the nonparental ditype (NPD) ratio, which compares the observed number of four-strand DCOs within a single interval with the number expected in the absence of interference (PAPAZIAN 1952 Down; SNOW 1979 Down). Both the coefficients of coincidence and the NPD ratios are very similar between the wild-type and mms4 diploids, indicating that MMS4-independent crossovers are distributed normally by interference (Table 3; data not shown).


 
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Table 3. Coefficients of coincidence in isogenic MMS4 and mms4 diploids

Physical monitoring of recombination events in mus81 and mms4 mutants:
The genetic data are based on a highly selected subset of cells (the ~10% that form mature asci at 30°, of which only ~10% make four viable spores). The small reduction on crossovers observed genetically may, therefore, overestimate the number of crossovers occurring in the population as a whole. This caveat was addressed by detecting DSBs and crossovers by direct analysis of the DNA at the HIS4::LEU2 meiotic recombination hotspot on chromosome III (STORLAZZI et al. 1995 Down). Although mms4 and mus81 phenotypes with respect to DSBs are highly similar, they are not identical (Fig 3). DSBs are slightly more delayed in mus81 than in mms4 and DSBs tend to persist longer in mms4 than in mus81. Whether or not these subtle differences are meaningful remains to be seen. No synergistic phenotypes were observed between the mus81 mms4 diploid and either single mutant (Fig 3). Crossing over was unaffected by the mutants in this experiment, although this result is somewhat variable. In some experiments we have observed up to a 1.8-fold reduction in crossovers by this assay (DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down; see below). The variability is likely due to the fact that the effect on crossing over by mus81 and mms4 is relatively small (<2-fold) and the limits on the resolution of the quantitation. It is clear, however, that the bulk of meiotic crossovers do not require MUS81/MMS4.



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Figure 3. Effects of mus81 and mus81 mms4 on the formation of DSBs and crossovers at the HIS4/LEU2 recombination hotspot. DNA was isolated from wild type (NKY1551), mus81{Delta} (NH428), mus81{Delta} mms4{Delta} (NH445), and mms4{Delta} (NH301) at different times after transfer to sporulation medium at 33°. The bracket indicates DSBs. DNA was digested with XhoI and probed with a 0.6-kb EcoRI/XmnI fragment from pNKY155. The expected DSB and crossover (CO) fragments predicted by MCKEE and KLECKNER 1997 Down are indicated. Parental fragments are labeled P. The second crossover fragment is not resolved from the larger parental band. DSB and CO fragments were quantitated as described in DE LOS SANTOS et al. (2001). To enhance visibility, a longer exposure of the DSB part of the gel is shown.

Physical assays of recombination have been used to characterize intermediate steps of recombination, which proceed via the formation of DNA joint molecules (SCHWACHA and KLECKNER 1995 Down). First, one side of a resected DSB invades an intact homologous duplex and undergoes strand exchange to form a SEI. The second DSB end then interacts to form a dHJ. DNA synthesis and ligation must accompany these transitions to produce dHJs with uninterrupted full-length strands, as observed (SCHWACHA and KLECKNER 1995 Down; ALLERS and LICHTEN 2001A Down). Two recent studies have provided evidence that dHJs are the direct precursors of crossovers during meiosis (ALLERS and LICHTEN 2001A Down; HUNTER and KLECKNER 2001 Down). To determine the role of MUS81/MMS4 in joint molecule formation and resolution, we analyzed DSBs, SEIs, dHJs, and crossovers in wild-type (NHY290) and mms4 (NHY1155) cells at a modified version of the HIS4::LEU2 locus (Fig 4; HUNTER and KLECKNER 2001 Down).



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Figure 4. Assay system for analysis of recombination intermediates. (A) Physical map of the modified HIS4/LEU2 locus (see HUNTER and KLECKNER 2001 Down, for details). Open reading frames and diagnostic restriction sites are shown. Parental homologs "Mom" and "Dad" are distinguished by XhoI restriction site polymorphisms (circled X's). The size and identity of signal detected by Southern hybridization with a unique probe (probe A, SCHWACHA and KLECKNER 1997 Down) are shown below. SEI 1 and 2 correspond to the prominent SEI species, SEI 3 and SEI 4, described in HUNTER and KLECKNER 2001 Down. IS-dHJs, intersister double HJs; IH-dHJs, interhomolog double HJs; Recs, interhomolog crossover recombinants. (B) Southern blots of one-dimensional gels from wild-type (NHY290) and mms4{Delta} (NHY1155) time courses. Joint molecule recombination intermediates (highlighted by bracket) were analyzed by two-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis and Southern hybridization, as shown in C. In this case, branched DNA species are retarded relative to linear molecules in the second dimension. DHJs are highlighted by a trident; the prominent interhomolog signal is flanked by the two weaker intersister species. SEIs are highlighted by a fork with three lines; the two prominent species correspond to SEI 1 and SEI 2.

In wild type, DSBs first appear 2 hr after transfer into sporulation medium at 30°, peak at 4.5 hr, and have essentially disappeared by 7 hr (Fig 4 and Fig 5C, Fig I). Steady-state levels of SEIs, interhomolog dHJs (IH-dHJs), and intersister dHJs (IS-dHJs) peak at ~4.5 hr; crossovers (Recs) are first detected at 4.5 hr and reach maximum levels at ~8 hr (Fig 4 and Fig 5C, ii, iii, iv, and vi). The timing of DNA events is essentially identical to that described by HUNTER and KLECKNER 2001 Down.



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Figure 5. Analysis of recombination intermediates in wild-type and mms4{Delta} diploids. (A and B) Top row, 2D gels showing representative time points; asterisks indicate time points in the second row. Third and fourth rows, DNA species quantitated as percentage of total hybridizing signal and plotted against time after transfer to sporulation medium. SEIs and dHJs are analyzed using 2D gels; DSBs and Recs are analyzed by 1D gel (see Fig 4B and Fig C). (C) Direct comparison of meiotic events in wild type and mms4{Delta}. Data are taken from A and B. In graph v, the ratio of signals, IH-dHJ/IS-dHJ, is plotted against time after transfer to sporulation medium. % MI/MII, percentage of cells that have completed one or both meiotic divisions as determined by DAPI staining. Dotted lines indicate discontinuities in the x-axes.

In mms4, DSB kinetics parallel those described previously (DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down); DSBs peak at essentially the same level as wild type but this peak occurs 2 hr later than that of wild type and significant numbers of DSBs remain at late times. SEIs form at reduced levels (~2-fold) and peak 2–3 hr later than wild type. IH-dHJs are also reduced, perhaps to an even greater extent (~3-fold), and appear with a similar delay. Formation of intersister dHJs is also delayed but in contrast to the interhomolog species, IS-dHJs form at high levels (~1.25-fold reduction in peak steady-state levels and very similar areas under the corresponding curves). This effect is seen most clearly when the ratios of interhomolog dHJs to intersister dHJs are plotted over time (Fig 5C, Fig V). Consistent with previous reports (SCHWACHA and KLECKNER 1997 Down; HUNTER and KLECKNER 2001 Down), dHJ formation in wild-type cells is heavily biased toward the interhomolog species with an average ratio of 4.3. Interhomolog bias is almost absent in mms4 cells, which have an average IH-dHJ/IS-dHJ ratio of 1.4-fold (in both cases, the first time point at which dHJs are detectable is excluded from this average because levels are very low and quantitation is likely to be inaccurate). Crossover products appear at reduced levels (1.8-fold) and with a delay of ~3 hr and finally, meiotic divisions are delayed but eventually occur with reasonable efficiency as observed previously for mms4 SK1 strains at 30° (DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down; Fig 5C, vi and vii).

mus81 and mms4 have no effect on chromosome synapsis in the NKY1551 SK1 strain background:
Previously polycomplexes and other anomalies in the formation of synaptonemal complexes (SCs) were observed in the mms4 derivative of NH144 (DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down). Similar results were obtained for mus81 in this strain background at 33° (data not shown). These anomalies appear to be strain specific since they were rarely seen in the mus81, mms4, and mus81 mms4 derivatives of NKY1551 (data not shown). All four diploids exhibited SCs at the same early time point (4 hr) but, in the mus81, mms4, and mus81 mms4 diploids, SCs persisted until 7 hr in a subset of cells; no SCs were observed in the wild type at such a late time point (data not shown). Thus, entry into pachytene is not delayed but exit from pachytene is retarded in the mutants, consistent with a delay in pachytene triggered by the meiotic recombination checkpoint. In addition to normal SCs, many nuclei with faint and/or fragmented SCs were seen in the mutants at 7 hr (data not shown). We assume that these SCs are in the process of disintegration after prolonged arrest at pachytene. Synapsis is therefore not affected by absence of MUS81 or MMS4.

MMS4/MUS81 and MSH4/MSH5 function independently with respect to both spore viability and crossing over:
The MSH4/MSH5 genes encode meiosis-specific MutS homologs that, like MUS81/MMS4, are required for full levels of crossing over (ROSS-MACDONALD and ROEDER 1994 Down; HOLLINGSWORTH et al. 1995 Down). The phenotypes of msh4/msh5 mutants are, however, distinct from those of mms4/mus81. For example, the spore lethality in msh4/msh5 mutants can be attributed to homolog nondisjunction, which is not the case for mus81/mms4 (HOLLINGSWORTH et al. 1995 Down; DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down; this study). Also, interference is not observed between the crossovers that form in msh4/msh5 (NOVAK et al. 2001 Down; N. HUNTER, V. BOERNER, A. JAMBAHKAR and N. KLECKNER, unpublished results) whereas crossovers in mus81/mms4 do show an interference distribution (this study). These observations suggest the possibility that MUS81/MMS4 and MSH4/MSH5 promote distinct classes of crossovers. Consistent with this idea, a mus81 msh5 double mutant shows decreased spore viability relative to either single mutant (wild type, 96.1%; msh5, 43.9%; mus81, 35.6%; mus81 msh5, 19.5%). These data resemble those observed for mms4 msh5 (DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down). Physical analysis of crossing over at the HIS4::LEU2 locus reveals that crossing over in a mms4 msh5 double mutant is reduced ~3-fold relative to either of the single mutants (Fig 6). A residual amount of crossing over (~6-fold reduced, relative to wild type) can still be detected in mms4 msh5 cells and may account for the residual spore viability observed for this strain. When taken together with the results presented above, these data indicate that MUS81/MMS4 and MSH4/MSH5 promote essentially independent classes of meiotic crossovers.



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Figure 6. Effects of msh5, mms4, and mms4 msh5 on the formation of crossovers at the modified HIS4/LEU2 recombination hotspot. (A) DNA was isolated from wild type (NKY1296), mms4{Delta} (NHY1298), msh5{Delta} mms4{Delta} (NHY1299), and msh5{Delta} (NHY1297) at different times after transfer to sporulation medium at 33°. The DNA was digested with XhoI and probed with a 0.6-kb AgeI/BglII fragment from pNH90. The expected crossover (CO) and parental (P) fragments predicted in Fig 4 are indicated. (B) The CO2 bands were quantitated as described in DE LOS SANTOS et al. (2001). Because of the bubble in the P2 band of the NHY1297 diploid, for quantitation purposes, the total DNA is defined as P1 + CO2.

Catalytic site residues are required for MUS81 function during meiosis:
MUS81 is proposed to resolve meiotic HJs in S. pombe, a function for which it is apparently not required in S. cerevisiae meiosis. The question then exists whether MUS81 acts in a fundamentally different way, e.g., as a structural protein instead of an enzyme, during meiosis in budding yeast compared to fission yeast. To address this, two conserved aspartic acid residues (D414A, D415A) in the Mus81 protein were changed to alanine. Recent experiments have shown that the aspartic acid in the mammalian XPF protein equivalent to D415 is part of the active site required for catalytic activity (ENZLIN and SCHARER 2002 Down). These mutations have been shown to create a null allele in S. pombe and to abolish enzymatic activity in both the S. pombe and human Mus81 complexes without affecting protein stability (BODDY et al. 2001 Down; CHEN et al. 2001 Down). The S. cerevisiae mus81-DD allele failed to complement both the sporulation and spore viability defects of mus81, producing 37.5% viable spores compared to 85.2% for the wild type. The catalytic activity of MUS81 is therefore required for meiosis.

Expression of the bacterial Holliday junction resolvase rusA fails to suppress the mus81 meiotic mutant phenotypes:
The spore inviability of S. pombe mus81 mutants can be partially suppressed by expression of the highly specific Holliday junction resolvase, rusA. Although crossovers are detected in S. cerevisiae mus81 mutants, it is possible that failure to resolve a subset of HJs results in triggering the meiotic recombination checkpoint and decreased spore viability. In this case, overexpression of rusA might suppress the mus81 meiotic defects in S. cerevisiae. This idea was tested by fusing the same NLS-rusA-2HA allele (hereafter referred to as rusA) used by BODDY et al. 2001 Down to the meiosis-specific MEK1 promoter on a high-copy-number plasmid (pNH246wt). As a control, an allele containing a mutation in the catalytic site of the enzyme, rusA-D70N (pNH246), was included (DOE et al. 2000 Down). Western blot analysis using {alpha}-HA antibodies confirmed that the rusA proteins were expressed at 3 hr, prior to the time that crossovers are first observed (data not shown). No improvement in either sporulation or spore viability was observed in cells expressing either rusA protein (Table 4). The meiosis specificity of the expression of the MEK1p-rusA allele prohibits performing alternative assays in vegetative cells to determine whether or not rusA is active in budding yeast. Suppression of the mus81 spore inviability was therefore repeated with an untagged allele of rusA that is fused to the SGS1 promoter. This rusA plasmid suppresses the UV and camptothecin sensitivity of mms4 and is therefore functional in S. cerevisiae (S. BRILL, personal communication). Also, no suppression of the mus81 meiotic phenotypes was observed with this allele of rusA (Table 4).


 
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Table 4. Sporulation and spore viability in mus81 diploids overexpressing rusA


*  DISCUSSION
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Mus81/Mms4 is not the major meiotic HJ resolvase in S. cerevisiae:
Mus81 was proposed to be a HJ resolvase in part on the basis of the observation that crude preparations of Mus81 from S. pombe and human cells cleave HJs in vitro (BODDY et al. 2001 Down; CHEN et al. 2001 Down). However, recent experiments using Mus81 complexes, either purified to homogeneity from bacterial cells or partially purified from human cells, indicate that the fission yeast, budding yeast, and human enzymes all exhibit a preference for cleaving three-way junction and replication fork structures over HJs (KALIRAMAN et al. 2001 Down; CONSTANTINOU et al. 2002 Down; DOE et al. 2002 Down). In addition, those HJs cleaved by Mus81cannot be religated, indicating that nonsymmetrical nicks are being generated (BODDY et al. 2001 Down; CONSTANTINOU et al. 2002 Down). It has therefore been proposed that eukaryotes might resolve HJs in a different way from the paradigm established by bacterial HJ resolvases, such as ruvC and rusA, in which two symmetrical nicks are generated on strands of opposite polarity (WEST et al. 1984 Down; BODDY et al. 2001 Down). The finding of a ruvC-like activity from human cells, however, argues against this idea (CONSTANTINOU et al. 2002 Down).

Several aspects of our data indicate that Mus81/Mms4 is not the major meiotic HJ resolvase in S. cerevisiae. First, mus81 and mms4 exhibit, at most, a twofold decrease in crossing over and this reduction appears to be limited to specific chromosomes. Second, double HJs do not accumulate in an mms4 mutant, as would be expected for a mutant whose sole defect is the inability to resolve HJs. Finally, unlike fission yeast, expression of a heterologous HJ resolvase has no suppressive effect on the mus81 and mms4 meiotic phenotypes.

S. cerevisiae Mms4/Mus81 promotes a distinct set of meiotic crossovers:
The crossovers that form in an mms4 mutant are qualitatively normal, being subject to interference. We have shown that the majority of these MMS4/MUS81-independent exchanges are facilitated by the MSH5 gene product. In contrast to the mms4 phenotype, the residual crossovers that occur in msh4 or msh5 mutants do not show interference (NOVAK et al. 2001 Down; N. HUNTER, V. BOERNER, A. JAMBAHKAR and N. KLECKNER, unpublished results). These facts are consistent with the idea that there are (at least) two classes of crossovers in S. cerevisiae: Class I crossovers exhibit an interference distribution whereas class II crossovers do not (e.g., ZALEVSKY et al. 1999 Down; COPENHAVER et al. 2002 Down). We can now propose that the two classes of crossovers are promoted by biochemically distinct processes: class I by a Msh4/5-based complex and class II by a Mms4/Mus81-based complex.

Both genetic and physical assays show that the decrease in crossing over in mus81 and mms4 mutants is modest (1.1- to 1.8-fold) and our analysis of crossover distribution implies that that Mus81/Mms4 promotes a specific subset of crossovers, as opposed to having a partial, but general, role in crossing over. More specifically, class II crossovers appear to be more prominent between shorter chromosomes, suggesting that recombination responds to chromosome size by modulating the relative numbers of class I and class II crossovers. A strong prediction of the two-crossover pathway model is that crossovers present in mms4 mutants should exhibit stronger interference than wild type. Our current data set is too small to establish whether or not this is true, and therefore models in which MUS81/MMS4 have a general role in crossing over cannot be ruled out. To prove the chromosome size specificity of mms4, the same genetic intervals need to be examined in the context of short and long chromosomes for crossovers and interference. Experiments to do this using translocation chromosomes are currently underway.

Three aspects of meiotic recombination in wild-type S. cerevisiae have been correlated with chromosome size. First, KABACK et al. 1989 Down have shown that recombination rate responds directly to changes in chromosome size, with smaller chromosomes having higher rates of crossing over. Second, small chromosomes were found to have less intense crossover interference than large ones (KABACK et al. 1999 Down). Finally, the genome-wide analysis of meiotic DSB hotspots, performed by GERTON et al. 2000 Down, indicates that recombination hotspots are denser along short chromosomes. Taken together, these data suggest that chromosome size-dependent changes in the rate of crossing over may result from correlated modulation of both recombination initiation (DSB formation) and crossover interference. Our results suggest that Mms4/Mus81 is central to this phenomenon.

Reconciling differences between mus81 meiotic phenotypes in S. cerevisiae and S. pombe:
In most organisms, including S. cerevisiae, homologous chromosomes become coaligned and physically associated along their lengths via the SC. A major SC component, Zip1, is required for the formation of crossovers that show an interference distribution (SYM and ROEDER 1994 Down) and, moreover, epistasis analysis reveals that ZIP1 and MSH4/5 promote the same set of crossovers (NOVAK et al. 2001 Down). In contrast, there is no SC and no crossover interference in S. pombe (BAHLER et al. 1993 Down; MUNZ 1994 Down) and, accordingly, ZIP1 and MSH4/5 homologs are absent from the S. pombe genome (VILLENEUVE and HILLERS 2001 Down). We propose, therefore, that meiotic crossovers in S. pombe arise exclusively via a SC-independent, MUS81-dependent pathway. The MUS81 pathway also operates in S. cerevisiae, but most crossovers arise via the pathway defined by ZIP1 and MSH4/5 (Fig 7). The dependency in S. pombe solely on the MUS81 pathway for crossovers may explain why the mus81 spore viability defect is so much more severe in fission yeast compared to budding yeast (<0.1% vs. 40%).



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Figure 7. Model for two pathways of crossing over. Shaded lines indicate the condensed pairs of homologous sister chromatids. Vertical lines indicate synapsis. Open ovals indicate crossovers along the interference ZIP1/MSH5-dependent pathway. Solid bars indicate crossovers occurring along the noninterference MUS81/MMS4-dependent pathway.

Why does rusA suppress the mus81 spore inviability in S. pombe but not in S. cerevisiae? One explanation is that Mus81 complexes function differently in the two yeasts, i.e., as a HJ resolvase in S. pombe and a 3' flap endonuclease in S. cerevisiae. This argument is weakened by the recent observation that S. pombe Mus81/Eme1 purified from bacterial cells exhibits the same preference for 3' flap and replication fork structures as Mus81/Mms4 (DOE et al. 2002 Down). Another possibility is that rusA is able to cleave 3' flaps in vivo. Although rusA is highly specific for HJ cleavage in vitro, how it acts when overexpressed in a eukaryotic nucleus has not been determined. In this case, rusA may not suppress mus81/mms4 in S. cerevisiae because access to the DNA is blocked by synapsis between homologous chromosomes. The sporulation and spore viability defects of mms4 can be partially suppressed by red1 but not mek1 (DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down). One phenotypic difference between red1 and mek1 is that mek1 mutants form some SC while red1 mutants do not (ROCKMILL and ROEDER 1990 Down, ROCKMILL and ROEDER 1991 Down). We have argued that in an mms4 diploid, alternative pathways may resolve recombination intermediates in the absence of synapsis, but that SC formation prevents such alternative processing (DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001). It is possible that the presence of SC also prevents rusA from acting. Since S. pombe chromosomes do not synapse, there is no barrier to rusA action in this species.

The complementary situation appears to exist in nematodes. Crossing over in worms is likely to undergo interference (A. VILLENEUVE, personal communication) and is completely abolished by mutation of either msh-4 or msh-5 (ZALEVSKY et al. 1999 Down; KELLY et al. 2000 Down). Therefore, by our model, C. elegans most closely resembles an S. cerevisiae mms4/mus81 mutant (Fig 7). Although a Mus81 homolog is present in nematodes (Saccharomyces Genome Database), it is lacking an N-terminal domain that is also absent from S. pombe but is common to both mammalian and budding yeast Mus81 (A. NEIMAN, personal communication). Mutation of conserved residues within this domain creates null alleles of MUS81 with regard to spore viability, suggesting this domain may be specifically involved in the meiotic function of MUS81 (D. TURNEY and N. M. HOLLINGSWORTH, unpublished results). It will be interesting to discover whether or not mus81 mutants in nematodes have a meiotic phenotype.

Recombination intermediates and interference-mediated crossovers are delayed in the absence of MUS81 and MMS4:
Although physical analysis of recombination intermediates in mus81{Delta} and mms4{Delta} cells is not indicative of a problem with HJ resolution, the progression of some meiotic events is clearly different from wild type in several ways. For example, peak steady-state levels of DSBs occur later than normal. This observation could be explained in several different ways:

  1. DSBs form later due to a delay in meiotic S-phase caused by mus81/mms4-related replication problems. This possibility seems unlikely, given that all of the mus81 and mms4 meiotic phenotypes are dependent upon the initiation of recombination (DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down; KALIRAMAN et al. 2001 Down).

  2. DSBs are formed with normal timing but some DSBs turn over faster than normal.

  3. Fewer DSBs are formed.

In addition, some DSBs do not appear to turn over (or arise in some aberrant way, e.g., faulty processing of an intermediate). The fact that all ensuing events occur later than normal is most consistent with a general delay in meiosis. However, SCs appear with normal timing in mus81/mms4 mutants, indicating that two key events of the meiotic program, homolog coalignment and SC formation, are unaffected.

Although many crossovers in mms4{Delta} cells form and are subject to an interference distribution, they arise later than normal due to the mms4-induced delay in meiotic progression. Formation of crossover precursors, SEIs and dHJs, is similarly delayed. Perhaps correction of the problems along the MMS4/MUS81 pathway is required before the events along the MSH4/5 pathway can proceed.

Model of MMS4/MUS81 function in S. cerevisiae:
Recently an alternative pathway for meiotic recombination was proposed to account for the existence of recombination intermediates that do not conform to the predictions of the DSBR model (ALLERS and LICHTEN 2001B Down). In the strand displacement-mediated crossover model, recombination is initiated by formation of a DSB followed by resection and invasion of the nonsister duplex. After DNA synthesis extends the invading strand, it is partially displaced and anneals to the 3' ss tail on the other side of the break. If the extended sequence is longer than the 3' ss tail, a 3' flap may be generated (Fig 8B). Cleavage of the flap 5' to the junction would allow the break to be fixed by extension and ligation.



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Figure 8. Pathways of meiotic DSB repair. In all cases, recombination is initiated by the invasion of a resected 3' tail into the homologous duplex. (A) The canonical DSB repair model. After capture of the second end, ligation creates two HJs flanking regions of heteroduplex DNA. Resolution of the HJs in opposite ways (indicated by carets) generates two intact crossover chromosomes. (B) Strand displacement-mediated crossing over with a 3' flap. After DNA synthesis extends the invading strand, the strand is partially displaced and reanneals to the ss tail on the other side of the break. Overreplication creates a 3' flap that could be cleaved by Mus81/Mms4p (indicated by an asterisk). Resolution of the HJs generates an intact crossover chromatid and an unrepaired chromatid. (C) Strand displacement-mediated crossing over with a 5' flap. The overreplicated strand anneals completely to the other side of the break, thereby creating a 5' flap. Repair is achieved by cleavage of the flap and ligation. Resolution of the HJs generates two intact crossover chromatids. Dashed lines indicate newly synthesized DNA.

This type of 3' flap structure is an excellent substrate in vitro for purified Mus81/Mms4 (KALIRAMAN et al. 2001 Down). We therefore propose that MUS81/MMS4 is required to process these flaps during meiotic recombination (DE LOS SANTOS et al. 2001 Down). Failure to cleave the flaps results in unprocessed recombination intermediates that trigger the meiotic recombination checkpoint. The decrease in dHJs and SEIs observed in mms4 could be explained if a failure to process flaps at the annealing stage renders the intermediates labile or causes them to be processed by a different mechanism. In some cases, resolution of the dHJs could result in one crossover chromosome and one unrepaired chromatid that would be lethal to the spore (Fig 8B). This mechanism of lethality could explain the near random distribution of viable spores in tetrads if lethality is dependent upon the number of unrepaired chromosomes that segregate to any given spore.

For both mms4 and mus81, a slightly higher number of four-viable-spore tetrads are observed than are predicted by random death. Clearly all of the chromatids in these asci are intact since all of the spores are viable. One way this could occur would be if the 3' flap is converted to a 5' flap, perhaps by branch migration (Fig 8C). The 5' flap could then be cleaved by a 5' flap endonuclease, allowing ligation and repair of the break. Because the heteroduplex tracts would be longer, higher levels of gene conversion would be predicted to occur. In fact, elevated levels of gene conversion were observed for both mus81 and mms4 in four-viable-spore asci. If the four-viable-spore asci result from 5' flap processing, they should be eliminated by a second mutation in a gene encoding the 5' flap endonuclease. RAD2 and RAD27 both encode 5' flap endonucleases (HABRAKEN et al. 1995 Down; KAO et al. 2002 Down). Spore viability is unaffected by rad2 in either the presence or the absence of MUS81 (N. M. HOLLINGSWORTH, unpublished results). The mus81 rad27 combination is synthetically lethal in vegetative cells (TONG et al. 2001 Down; N. M. HOLLINGSWORTH, unpublished results). Therefore while the meiotic experiment could not be done, this genetic interaction suggests that MUS81/MMS4 and RAD27 act in alternative pathways of DNA repair in mitotically dividing cells.

Earlier we proposed that MUS81/MMS4 functions on a different pathway for crossing over from that of MSH5. However, crossing over and spore viability are only reduced in the msh5 mms4/mus81 double mutants; they are not eliminated. While the residual crossovers in the double mutant could be explained by the presence of a third pathway of crossing over, this result may also be explained if MUS81/MMMS4 functions in the partial strand displacement and annealing pathway described above. MUS81/MMM4 is required only for those intermediates in which the originally invading end is overreplicated to make the 3' flap. If overreplication occurs in just a subset of intermediates along this pathway, intermediates without flaps that can be resolved normally in the absence of MUS81/MMS4 to make crossovers may also be generated.


*  FOOTNOTES

1 These authors contributed equally to this article. Back


*  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Steve Brill, Michael Lichten, Aaron Neiman, Jim Haber, and Frank Stahl for helpful discussions. JoAnne Engebrecht and Aaron Neiman provided useful comments on the manuscript. We thank Paul Russell and Steve Brill for providing rusA plasmids. We are grateful to Lihong Wan for tetrad dissection and to Dana Turney for excellent technical support. This work was supported in part by research grant 1-FY02-754 from the March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation and by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (GM-50717) to N.M.H. J.L. was supported by the Austrian Science Fund (grant S8202).

Manuscript received December 9, 2002; Accepted for publication January 31, 2003.


*  LITERATURE CITED
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

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