High copy number suppression of the meiotic arrest caused by a <i>dmc1</i> mutation: <i>REC114</i> imposes an early recombination block and <i>RAD54 </i>promotes a <i>DMC1</i>‐independent DSB repair pathway

Genes to Cells - Tập 4 Số 8 - Trang 425-444 - 1999
Douglas K. Bishop1, Yuri Nikolski1, June Oshiro1, Jason Chon1, Miki Shinohara1, Xi Chen1
1Department of Radiation and Cellular Oncology and Department of Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology, University of Chicago, Chicago IL 60637, USA

Tóm tắt

Background DMC1, the meiosis‐specific eukaryotic homologue of bacterial recA, is required for completion of meiotic recombination and cell cycle progression past prophase. In a dmc1 mutant, double strand break recombination intermediates accumulate and cells arrest in prophase. We isolated genes which, when present at high copy numbers, suppress the meiotic arrest phenotype conferred by dmc1 mutations.ResultsAmong the genes isolated were two which suppress arrest by altering the recombination process. REC114 suppresses formation of double strand break (DSB) recombination intermediates. The low viability of spores produced by dmc1 mutants carrying high copy numbers of REC114 is rescued when reductional segregation is bypassed by mutation of spo13. High copy numbers of RAD54 suppress dmc1 arrest, promote DSB repair, and allow formation of viable spores following reductional segregation. Analysis of the combined effects of a null mutation in RED1, a gene required for meiotic chromosome structure, with null mutations in RAD54 and DMC1 shows that RAD54, while not normally important for repair of DSBs during meiosis, is required for efficient repair of breaks by the intersister recombination pathway that operates in red1 dmc1 double mutants.ConclusionsOver‐expression of REC114 suppresses meiotic arrest by preventing formation of DSBs. High copy numbers of RAD54 activate a DMC1‐independent mechanism that promotes repair of DSBs by homology‐mediated recombination. The ability of RAD54 to promote DMC1‐independent recombination is proposed to involve suppression of a constraint that normally promotes recombination between homologous chromatids rather than sisters.

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