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Genetics, Vol. 169, 767-781, February 2005, Copyright © 2005
doi:10.1534/genetics.104.035824
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,1
* Waksman Institute and Department of Genetics, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854-8020
Biotechnology Center for Agriculture and the Environment, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854-8020
2 Corresponding author: Waksman Institute, Rutgers University, 190 Frelinghuysen Rd., Piscataway, NJ 08854.
E-mail: mckim{at}rci.rutgers.edu
| ABSTRACT |
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The presence of single-strand tails at DSB sites provides a mechanism for homology searching and chromosome alignment (ROEDER 1997). In organisms like Drosophila and C. elegans, however, another mechanism aside from recombination must exist to precisely align homolgous chromosomes during meiosis. Indeed, DSB-independent mechanisms for aligning meiotic chromosomes appear to be widespread. Similar to Drosophila and C. elegans, homolog pairing in fission yeast involves a DSB-independent component (DING et al. 2004). While homolog pairing is observed in Drosophila somatic chromosomes (FUNG et al. 1998) and male meiotic chromosomes that do not recombine (VAZQUEZ et al. 2002), studies of meiotic chromosome pairing prior to or in the absence of SC formation in Drosophila females have not been reported.
Classical studies on chromosome pairing in Drosophila have involved the analysis of crossover suppression or segregation patterns in chromosome rearrangement heterozygotes. Translocation heterozygosity suppresses crossing over in a variety of organisms and has been extensively studied in Drosophila (e.g., ROBERTS 1976). Although the mechanism of crossover suppression is not known, a pairing defect has often been implicated. DOBZHANSKY (1931) proposed that crossover reductions were the result of competitive pairing between the partial homologs in translocation heterozygotes. ROBERTS (1970)(1972) concluded that crossover reductions in translocation heterozygotes were due to disturbed pairing and not due to elimination of the crossover strands. He also proposed that synapsis initiates in the distal regions of each chromosome arm. Consistent with these genetic observations, cytological studies have found a reduction in recombination nodules in some translocation heterozygotes (reviewed in HERICKHOFF et al. 1993). Effects on synapsis, however, are usually limited to the regions surrounding the breakpoints.
Pairing-site models have been proposed in C. elegans and Drosophila. Although the details of these models differ, both suggest that one or more sites on each chromosome are required for normal levels of crossing over and may have a role in the pairing or synapsis of homologs. Experiments using chromosome rearrangements in C. elegans have mapped a single site at one end of each chromosome that is required for crossing over (MCKIM et al. 1988, 1993; VILLENEUVE 1994; ZETKA and ROSE 1995). In Drosophila, HAWLEY (1980) investigated the relationship between X chromosome translocation breakpoints and the crossover-suppressed region. Heterozygosity for a translocation suppressed crossing over within an interval defined by specific sites or boundaries and had little effect on crossing over in adjacent intervals. It was proposed that these sites mediated the initial interactions between homologous chromosomes leading to synapsis and recombination. Currently, however, there is no direct evidence that these sites play a role in homolog pairing. In this study, we carried out an analysis of crossing-over suppression on chromosome 3R in translocation heterozygotes to test two predictions of the pairing-site hypothesis. First, does the function of these sites play a role in the initiation of meiotic recombination? And second, are these sites required for the pairing of homologous chromosomes?
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Preparation of DNA probes:
Cy3-labeled probes were made from BAC genomic DNA clones (HOSKINS et al. 2000). As described by MARSHALL et al. (1996),
10 µg of DNA was fragmented by digestion with six four-cutter restriction enzymes (AluI, HaeIII, MseI, MspI, RsaI, Sau3AI) and then labeled with Cy3-dCTP (Amersham, Buckinghamshire, UK) using terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (Invitrogen, San Diego). The identifiers and cytological locations of the clones are shown in Figure 1.
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Image analysis:
Images were collected and analyzed on two systems. The first was a DeltaVision restoration microscopy system (Applied Precision) equipped with a Nikon x60 N.A.1.4 oil immersion objective. The restoration and modeling was performed with softWoRx software (Applied Precision) on an Octane Workstation (Silicon Graphics). The second was a Zeiss Axioplan II imaging microscope equipped with a x60 or x100 N.A.1.4 oil immersion objective and a Sensicam CCD camera (Cooke). These images were analyzed using deconvolution and 3D analysis software from Vaytek (Fairfield, IA). Similar results were obtained using either system. In FISH experiments using ORB staining, oocytes were scored only where ORB was clearly localized to one cell, usually in regions 2b and 3 and thus in midpachytene. In experiments with C(3)G staining, all oocytes could be observed from region 2a (early pachytene) to region 3. No differences in homolog pairing were observed between early pachytene (region 2a) and late pachytene (region 3). Foci of hybridization were typically brightest in the surrounding nurse cell nuclei, and in some oocytes (<10%) no hybridization signal could be found. The failure to detect a signal had only a minor impact on the conclusions because of its low frequency and the experiments with c(3)G mutant females demonstrated the frequency at which pairing defects were detected. The distance between a homolog pair was measured between the brightest pixels of two foci. In a minority of nuclei, three foci were observed; two of these foci were usually close together and probably sister chromatids. The distance reported in these cases was the largest of the three possible measurements.
| RESULTS |
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Crossover suppression in one genetic interval did not result in compensatory increases in other intervals. For example, when the cu-e region was suppressed, there was no increase in crossing over in the e-ca region (Table 2, Figure 2). Thus, crossover suppression by translocations did not activate a system that regulates the total number of exchanges per chromosome arm. Crossing over increased in the centric st-cu region with some translocations, but these increases did not compensate for the observed decreases in other regions and may be related to the interchromosomal effect (WILLIAMSON 1966; K. MCKIM, unpublished results).
Evidence for a boundary in 85A-C:
Translocations with breakpoints between divisions 85 and 91, such as T(2;3)DP77 (85C) and T(2;3)C287 (89F), suppressed crossing over between cu and e but not e and ca (Tables 2 and 3). However, translocations with breakpoints proximal to 85A6 had no effect on crossing over in the cu-e interval. For example, T(2;3)P607 (82F), T(2;3)MAP3 (84A4-5), T(2;3)ScrWrv1 (84B1-2), T(1;3)JA29 (85A), and T(3;4)p42 (85A6) did not suppress crossing over in the cu-e region (Tables 2 and 3). Crossing over within the cu-e region was investigated using kar, cv-c, Sb, gl, and e (Figure 1). Crossover suppression was not restricted to the region around the breakpoint; the reductions in crossing over were uniform throughout the cu-e interval (Figure 2). For example, T(2;3)DP77 breaks close to cu but has similar crossover suppression effects within the karcv-c, cv-cSb, Sbgl, and gle intervals (Table 3). Similarly, T(2;3)C202 and T(2;3)C287 suppressed crossing over to a frequency lower than that of any of the subintervals, indicating that they suppress crossing over throughout the cu-e region.
Evidence for a boundary in 91A-93D:
The translocations that suppressed crossing over in the cu-e region, such as T(2;3)C202 and T(2;3)C287, had a normal frequency of crossing over in the e-ca region (Table 2). The location of the boundary is distal to 91A because T(2;3)gl63d (91A1-2) strongly suppressed the cu-e region. T(2;3)gl63d heterozygotes also caused a relatively mild reduction of crossing over in the e-ca region (47% of wild type), but this is not severe enough to indicate that it has a breakpoint to the right of the boundary site. More distal breakpoints suppressed crossing over when measured in the e-ca region. The distal limit for the boundary site is 93D because T(2;3)DP19 (93D) strongly suppressed crossing over in the e-ca region but mildly suppressed it in the cu-e region [Table 4 and compare gl-e in Table 3 for T(2;3)DP19 (37.0% of control) and T(2;3)C287 (1.6% of control)]. The mild effects of T(2;3)DP19 in the cu-e region are consistent with the effects of other distal translocations discussed below. That T(2;3)C202 and T(2;3)C287 suppressed crossing over in the gl-e region has two implications (Table 3). First, the location of the boundary site is closer to e (93D). Second, crossover suppression occurs on both sides of a translocation breakpoint (e.g., cu-breakpoint and breakpoint-e).
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Translocations that suppress crossing over along the whole arm:
While most of our data are consistent with a boundary at 91A-93D, some translocations in the e-ca region showed mild crossover suppression in the cu-e region. Crossing over was mildly reduced throughout the e-cu region in T(2;3)dpD and T(2;3)ltx16 (Tables 2 and 3). Similar results were also observed in two translocations involving chromosome 4 [T(3;4)A2 and T(3;4)A30] (Tables 2 and 3), and ROBERTS (1972) identified several translocations with breaks between e and ca, which, on the basis of measuring crossing over between st and ca, probably reduced crossing over between cu and e. This effect was most severe with translocation breakpoints in the middle of the e-ca region. For example, T(2;3)ltx16 and T(3;4)A2 suppressed crossing over in the cu-e region to a larger degree than T(2;3)ltx13 and T(3;4)A30. These results suggest that distal regions, especially the 94-96 region, are important for crossing over throughout chromosome 3R. We have excluded a centromere effect as an explanation for our results since the translocations that were characterized did not bring a centromere closer to the proximal regions.
The effects of distal translocation breaks on proximal regions such as the cu-e interval does not contradict the evidence for a boundary in 91A-93D. Distal translocations caused mild crossover suppression in the cu-e region (
50% of wild type; Figure 2), whereas translocation breaks between the sites at 85A-C and 91A-93D such as T(2;3)C202 caused much more severe reductions on crossing over (
5% of wild type). Therefore, the reductions in crossing over by breaks in the 94-96 region were tempered by the boundary in 91A-93D.
Translocations in centromere proximal regions do not suppress crossing over:
Most translocations did not suppress crossing over in the st-cu region, which includes the most proximal region on chromosome 3R. Even the T(2;3) chromosomes with breaks between the centromere and the 85A-C boundary site did not suppress crossing over anywhere on the right arm of the third chromosome (Table 2). One translocation, T(2;3)MAP, reduced crossing over in the st-cu interval, but this may be an effect of genetic background since the reduction was mild and crossing over was also low in the adjacent cu-e interval. One interpretation of these results is that the region between the centromere and the 85A-C boundary site is not sensitive to translocation heterozygosity. This conclusion assumes, however, that not all the crossing over between st and cu occurs to the left of the centromere. To directly measure the frequency of crossing over in proximal 3R, we used two P-element insertions (abs at 82A1-2 and ksr at 83A4-6; Table 5). No significant crossover suppression was observed with the translocations that break proximal to the 85A-C boundary. Similarly, as part of a study on crossover interference, DENELL and KEPPY (1979) measured crossing over within proximal chromosome 3R of T(Y;3)B155 (82C) heterozygotes and it was not suppressed. These results support the conclusion that crossing over in the proximal euchromatin is not sensitive to translocation heterozygosity.
Gene conversion is reduced in translocation heterozygotes:
Crossover suppression in translocation heterozygotes could occur because of either an early defect in the recombination pathway such as a failure to make DSBs or a defect in the system that controls whether a DSB is repaired as a crossover or as a noncrossover. If initiation of recombination is defective, then both recombination products, noncrossover (gene conversion) and crossover, should be affected. We tested this hypothesis by measuring the frequency of gene conversion at the rosy locus (HILLIKER et al. 1988) in two translocation heterozygotes (Table 6). T(2;3)DP92, which is a two-break rearrangement that suppresses crossing over throughout the entire right arm of the chromosome, was chosen because of its strong crossover suppression. T(2;3)DP77, which suppresses crossing over only within the cu-e region, was chosen because it had a more restricted crossover suppression pattern. Both suppressed crossing over in the region around the rosy gene (Table 3).
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820,000 progeny from T(2;3)DP92, ry531/ry606 and T(2;3)DP77, ry531/ry606 females, only one gene conversion event recovered compared to seven gene conversion events from
575,000 progeny in the normal chromosome control. These data demonstrate that the frequency of both products of DSB repair is reduced, suggesting that translocation heterozygotes have a defect in the initiation of meiotic recombination.
Analysis of meiotic homolog pairing using FISH:
If crossover suppression in translocation heterozygotes is due to defects in homolog pairing, as predicted by the pairing-site model, then the homologs should be unpaired in the crossover-suppressed regions. We tested this prediction in three sets of experiments by using FISH to observe the locations of homologous loci within the oocyte nucleus. In the first experiment, we examined homolog pairing in wild-type oocytes. In the second, we examined homolog pairing in translocation heterozygotes to determine if crossover-suppressed regions failed to pair. Finally, we examined c(3)G68 mutant females, where we hypothesized that homolog pairing defects would be observed.
Whole-mount ovaries were probed with one of five fluorescently labeled BAC clones on chromosome 3R (Figure 1). Within the ovary, prophase oocytes develop among 15 nurse cells and can be identified using antibodies to either the ORB protein, which accumulates during pachytene in the oocyte cytoplasm (LANTZ et al. 1994), or the C(3)G protein, which is a component of the synaptonemal complex that forms between synapsed meiotic chromosomes (PAGE and HAWLEY 2001). On the basis of the staining patterns of these two antibodies and relative position within the ovary, oocytes can be identified and staged (for details see Figure 3).
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0.4 µm (Figure 3). Since most wild-type oocyte nuclei contained only a single focus of hybridization, the homologous loci were usually
0.4 µm apart. And when there were two foci, they were probably within the context of homologs joined by SC. Similar results in wild-type females with an X chromosome probe have been reported by WEBBER et al. (2004).
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We also looked at nurse cells, which are the sister cells of the proocytes that form little or no SC, and found that the majority of these cells had a single focus of staining (Table 7). Since most nurse cells lack or have substantially reduced C(3)G staining (PAGE and HAWLEY 2001; data not shown), these results are consistent with the results using premeiotic cells in showing that complete SC formation is not required for homolog pairing. However, since short stretches of SC are often detected by EM (CARPENTER 1975) and may not be detected by C(3)G staining, these experiments did not determine if the homolog pairing in nurse cells was SC independent. As described below, however, efficient pairing in nurse cells is partially dependent on c(3)G.
Homolog pairing in translocations that suppress crossing over:
The probe BACR48M21 detects a locus at 86D1-E2, which is within the crossover suppressed region (cu-e) of translocations like T(2;3)C287 and T(2;3)DP77 with breaks between the 85A-C and 91A-93D sites. BACR48M21 detected a single focus of hybridization in the majority of T(2;3)C287/+ (89F) oocytes (27/35), which was similar to the frequency of nuclei with a single focus (66/78) in wild type (Table 8). In addition, the average distance between separated foci in T(2;3)C287/+ oocytes (0.96 µm) was similar to wild type. Similar results were obtained with T(2;3)DP77; 70/77 oocytes contained a single focus of hybridization and the distances between separated foci were similar to those seen in wild type. Experiments were also performed with T(2;3)dpD, which suppresses crossing over between e and ca. We used probes BACR22N13 and BACR17P04, which are within the crossover-suppressed region, and BACR48K23, which is close to the boundary site at 91A-93D and may be within the crossover-suppressed region. Again, the frequency of nuclei with a single focus of hybridization and the distance between separated foci was similar to the wild-type controls. These results suggest that crossover suppression in translocation heterozygotes may not be due to pairing defects. As described below, these results contrast with c(3)G mutant females, in which homolog pairing defects were observed.
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22.3 µm. Given that there are 20 cytological divisions per chromosome, there may be
2 µm from the T(2;3)dpD breakpoint to the BACR22N13 site. If SC formation was disrupted by a translocation breakpoint, we expected an absence of C(3)G staining in the vicinity of the homologous loci.
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However, these results did not rule out an effect of translocation heterozygotes on SC formation, especially if there are multiple initiation sites. Indeed, there were some indications that SC formation may be affected by the breakpoints. The C(3)G staining associated with the FISH foci often stained lightly and in a minority of nuclei was entirely absent near the hybridization signals for BACR22N13 (3/33; Figure 4) or BACR17P04 (5/31). Thus, while SC may form between homologous sequences in the crossover-suppressed regions of translocation heterozygotes, its structure or the organization of the chromosomes may be disturbed.
c(3)G mutant females have defects in the maintenance of homolog pairing:
Since homolog pairing defects were not detected in translocation heterozygotes, FISH experiments were performed in a mutant where we predicted that the homologs would be farther apart than in wild type. We tested if pairing defects could be detected in c(3)G mutant females that lack synapsis between homologs (SMITH and KING 1968; RASMUSSEN 1975). These experiments were performed using the c(3)G68 allele, which is a nonsense mutation that does not produce detectable protein (PAGE and HAWLEY 2001). On the basis of two criteria, significant pairing defects were observed in c(3)G mutant oocytes (Table 7). First, there were an increased number of nuclei with greater than one focus of hybridization. Second, when there were multiple foci in c(3)G mutant oocytes, the distance between them was greater than what was observed in wild type (Figure 3). Using the third chromosome probe BACR48M21, 8/14 c(3)G nuclei had multiple foci compared to 2/15 in wild type, and the distance between them (an average of 1.3 µm; Table 7) was greater than that seen in wild type (0.51 µm). Similar results were obtained with additional third chromosome probes (Table 7). Using BACR22N13, there were twice as many c(3)G nuclei with multiple foci (17/29, 58.6%) compared to wild type (10/39, 25.6%). When there were multiple foci in a c(3)G mutant, they were usually farther apart than in wild type.
In some c(3)G mutant nuclei, there were three or four foci, indicating separation of the sister chromatids (see MATERIALS AND METHODS). The genetic consequences of this observation are probably minimal since c(3)G mutants do not exhibit meiosis II nondisjunction and crossing over is eliminated. Therefore, cohesion is probably not affected at the sister centromeres and, without crossing over, defects in arm cohesion would not be expected to increase the frequency of meiosis I nondisjunction (HALL 1972).
The absence of C(3)G did not eliminate homolog pairing during meiotic prophase. Roughly half (12) of the c(3)G nuclei exhibited only a single focus of BACR22N13 hybridization, indicating that homolog pairing was not completely abolished. With probe BACR48K07, 7/10 c(3)G nuclei had a single focus of staining. Nonetheless, the separated foci in c(3)G nuclei were farther apart (2.1 µm) when compared with wild type (0.62 µm). The frequent occurrence of a single focus of hybridization in c(3)G mutant oocytes suggests that there is a SC-independent mechanism for meiotic pairing of the homologs.
Similar to the experiments described above in wild type, homolog pairing was examined in prepachytene cells (early meiotic prophase or premeiotic cells lacking ORB staining) and nurse cells of c(3)G mutant females (Table 7). In these cells as well, homolog pairing was partially c(3)G dependent. In both the prepachytene and nurse cells, an increase in separated foci was observed in c(3)G mutant females. Thus, even though antibody staining does not reveal C(3)G on the chromosomes of these cells, these results suggest that small amounts of C(3)G can function to promote or maintain homolog pairing. Due to the rapid transition from premeiotic to early meiotic prophase, we could not determine if the prepachytene cells requiring C(3)G for homolog pairing were premeiotic or in early meiotic prophase. Since C(3)G protein is first detected in early meiotic prophase, it is reasonable to suggest that the homologs enter meiosis paired in c(3)G mutant females, but then can rapidly become unpaired. Interestingly, these results suggest that somatic pairing mechanisms are not sufficient to explain the tight alignment along the entire length of meiotic chromosomes. From the earliest stages of meiotic prophase, homolog pairing is partially dependent on C(3)G.
| DISCUSSION |
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Boundary sites on chromosome 3R:
Translocations in Drosophila are region-specific crossover suppressors, where crossover suppression is most severe between discrete sites or boundaries. On the other side of these sites, crossing over is either unaffected or only mildly reduced. On the basis of this principle, sites important for meiotic recombination can be mapped by determining which translocations suppress crossing over in a given interval (Figure 5). HAWLEY (1980) examined crossing over within small regions in X chromosome translocations and mapped four sites. We have definitive evidence for two sites on chromosome 3R at 85A-C and 91A-93D and have tentatively defined a third site at 95B-97C. Also, a fourth site may be near the telomere if we assume that all recombination must occur between two boundary sites (HAWLEY 1980).
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DSB-independent synapsis of homologs during meiotic prophase and the role of boundary sites:
On the basis of the strong effect of distal breakpoints, ROBERTS (1972) concluded that the pairing of homologs initiates in the distal regions of each chromosome arm. In the pairing-site model, homologous chromosomes are brought together through the interactions of specialized regions (HAWLEY 1980). These models are attractive because the proposed activity of these sites provides a mechanism for a homology search and SC formation in the absence of DSBs (MCKIM et al. 1998). To directly test the pairing-site model, we employed FISH analysis to investigate homolog pairing in the meiotic nucleus of translocation heterozygotes. If the pairing-site model is correct, we would expect pairing defects in the crossover-suppressed region of translocation heterozygotes.
In contrast to these predictions, no significant homolog pairing defects specifically associated with recombination suppression were observed in translocation heterozygotes. The frequency of FISH signals appearing as two distinct foci and the distance between these foci were usually similar in wild-type and translocation heterozygotes. Furthermore, the FISH foci in crossover-suppressed regions were usually associated with C(3)G staining, indicating that SC can form in the crossover-suppressed regions of translocation heterozygotes. The behavior that we have observed with Drosophila translocations may be similar to other species, with the caveat that light microscopy may not detect small defects in synapsis. Electron microscopy of translocation heterozygotes in tomato, for example, showed that asynapsis was limited to the region around the breakpoints but involved 1016% of the chromosome arm length (HERICKHOFF et al. 1993). These data suggest that a defect unrelated to homolog pairing should be considered as the cause of crossover suppression. Indeed, since Drosophila homologs enter meiotic prophase already paired, there may be no need to propose the existence of additional generalized pairing mechanisms during meiosis.
Because homolog pairing appeared normal in translocation heterozygotes, we propose that the reduction in meiotic recombination is due to defects in chromosome structure or organization (Figure 5). Since a single translocation breakpoint suppresses crossing over throughout the region between two boundary sites, structural continuity between these sites appears to be crucial for normal levels of meiotic recombination. We propose that these sites establish chromosomal domains that regulate DSB formation. The nature of these domains is not known, but the boundary sites could help to establish a chromatin structure that facilitates recombination, or there could be a signal for recombination that must travel between two sites, analogous to the phenomenon of interference. Since SC formation defects were observed in some nuclei of translocation heterozygotes, establishing these domains could involve establishing continuous SC between two boundary sites. In addition, a translocation break could cause defects in chromosome structure that affect DSB formation, such as disruption of the transverse or lateral elements. A role for the assembly of SC components in the initiation of recombination is consistent with the observations that mutants in some Drosophila SC components have reduced DSB formation (JANG et al. 2003; S. MEHROTRA and K. MCKIM, unpublished results).
There were two exceptions to the idea that crossing over depends on two flanking boundary sites. First, translocations with breaks in the 94-96 region reduced crossing over throughout chromosome 3R whereas breakpoints proximal to the 91A-93D site suppressed crossing over only within their interval. ROBERTS (1972) also noted that chromosome 3R translocations with the most severe crossover suppression had breakpoints between divisions 91 and 96. The results with these translocations imply that, while recombination is affected primarily by factors operating between two boundary sites, there are also factors that regulate recombination on a chromosome-wide basis. This effect may represent an important difference between the X chromosome and the autosomes. HAWLEY (1980) found that distal translocation breakpoints generally did not have an effect on proximal regions.
Second, crossing over within the interval between the centromere and the 85A-D site was not suppressed by translocation breakpoints and in some cases was increased. The proximal regions of most chromosome arms have several other exceptional properties. Crossing over in this region is very low relative to the genome average (MCKIM et al. 2002) and yet crossing over is often increased in this region in mutants that reduce crossing over in most other regions (BAKER et al. 1976; CARPENTER 1988; BHAGAT et al. 2004). Crossovers in proximal regions may also exhibit positive interference (GREEN 1975; SINCLAIR 1975; DENELL and KEPPY 1979).
Mechanism of SC formation in Drosophila:
Previous studies have suggested that chromosomes are homologously paired prior to meiosis in the female germline (GRELL and DAY 1970), but these studies were based on the analysis of spread metaphase chromosomes. Our FISH analysis of prophase chromosomes demonstrates the accuracy attained by this alignment in relation to SC formation. We found that prior to SC formation most homologous loci are aligned at a distance of
0.4 µm, which is reminiscent of the presynaptic alignment observed in other organisms prior to SC formation (ZICKLER and KLECKNER 1998). Similarly, only a single focus of hybridization was observed in many c(3)G mutant oocytes, indicating that SC-independent pairing forces can bring the homologs together. The SC-independent pairing mechanism could be related to the forces that act in somatic cells (HIRAOKA et al. 1993; FUNG et al. 1998).
c(3)G mutant oocytes were unable to achieve the accuracy of meiotic homolog pairing observed in wild type. Therefore, somatic pairing mechanisms are not sufficient for homolog pairing during meiotic prophase. We cannot rule out a role for C(3)G in somatic pairing, but this is unlikely since C(3)G staining is not observed until meiotic prophase (PAGE and HAWLEY 2001). Since homologs were observed to be paired prior to SC formation in wild type, it is possible that the pairing defects in c(3)G mutant oocytes reflect dissociation of pairing rather than the initial failure to pair. In C. elegans syp-1 mutants, a c(3)G homolog, chromosomes initially pair but then dissociate prematurely (MACQUEEN et al. 2002). These results suggest that, while mechanisms similar to those that operate in somatic cells might be involved in the initial establishment of pairing, they are not sufficient to maintain meiotic chromosome pairing.
A somatic pairing mechanism does not provide insights into the mechanism of how Drosophila forms SC. In budding yeast, DSB formation has been proposed to be directly involved in SC formation (ZICKLER and KLECKNER 1998; HENDERSON and KEENEY 2004). Another role for DSBs is suggested by the analysis of spo11 mutants in Sordaria, in which both presynaptic alignment of homologs and SC formation are absent (STORLAZZI et al. 2003). These results suggest that an important function for DSBs is to bring homologs together prior to SC formation. The exceptional ability of Drosophila females to align chromosomes prior to prophase may be the basis for the difference between organisms that can form SC in the absence of DSBs and those that cannot. SC formation may initiate in the absence of DSB formation once the homologous chromosomes come within
0.4 µm of each other. In this model, SC formation could initiate either at many random sites or at specialized sites (see below). SC formation in budding yeast has been proposed to initiate at prospective crossover sites (FUNG et al. 2004).
Above we proposed that the boundary sites are involved in established chromosomal domains that regulate DSB formation and that SC components may play a role in this process. An intriguing possibility is that the boundary sites are where SC formation initiates, filling the role ascribed to crossover sites in budding yeast (Figure 5). While only a minority of the translocation heterozygote nuclei had defects in SC formation, our experiments probably underestimated these effects due to the limited resolution of light microscopy. For example, the failure of a FISH signal to be associated with SC may not be detected in all nuclei due to the close proximity of the SCs to other chromosomes. In addition, more pervasive defects in assembling the SC and associated chromatin structure around a translocation breakpoint could go undetected in our studies since they may not be observed at the resolution of light microscopy. Interestingly, Drososphila ord mutants lack classical SC structure by electron microscopy although there is relatively normal C(3)G staining by immunofluorescence (WEBBER et al. 2004). Further high-resolution experiments using electron microscopy will allow the structure of the SC in the crossover-suppressed regions of translocation heterozygotes to be determined. Finally, understanding the role of these sites will require molecular characterization of their sequences.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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| LITERATURE CITED |
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