4.4 Article

Turning coldspots into hotspots: targeted recruitment of axis protein Hop1 stimulates meiotic recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Journal

GENETICS
Volume 222, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

GENETICS SOCIETY AMERICA
DOI: 10.1093/genetics/iyac106

Keywords

meiosis; meiotic recombination; double-strand breaks; chromosome axis; crossing over; Hop1; recombination pathways

Funding

  1. Intramural Research Program of the NIH through the Center for Cancer Research at the National Cancer Institute

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The axis protein Hop1 plays a crucial role in promoting double-strand break formation and homologous recombination during meiotic recombination, while other factors may determine the specific recombination pathways involved.
The DNA double-strand breaks that initiate meiotic recombination are formed in the context of the meiotic chromosome axis, which in Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains a meiosis-specific cohesin isoform and the meiosis-specific proteins Hop1 and Red1. Hop1 and Red1 are important for double-strand break formation; double-strand break levels are reduced in their absence and their levels, which vary along the lengths of chromosomes, are positively correlated with double-strand break levels. How axis protein levels influence double-strand break formation and recombination remains unclear. To address this question, we developed a novel approach that uses a bacterial ParB-parS partition system to recruit axis proteins at high levels to inserts at recombination coldspots where Hop1 and Red1 levels are normally low. Recruiting Hop1 markedly increased double-strand breaks and homologous recombination at target loci, to levels equivalent to those observed at endogenous recombination hotspots. This local increase in double-strand breaks did not require Red1 or the meiosis-specific cohesin component Rec8, indicating that, of the axis proteins, Hop1 is sufficient to promote double-strand break formation. However, while most crossovers at endogenous recombination hotspots are formed by the meiosis-specific MutL gamma resolvase, crossovers that formed at an insert locus were only modestly reduced in the absence of MutL gamma, regardless of whether or not Hop1 was recruited to that locus. Thus, while local Hop1 levels determine local double-strand break levels, the recombination pathways that repair these breaks can be determined by other factors, raising the intriguing possibility that different recombination pathways operate in different parts of the genome.

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