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| Chromosome Structure Includes Recombination Machinery |
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| SciMed - Genetics & Genome | |||
| TS-Si News Service | |||
| Wednesday, 10 August 2011 15:00 | |||
Vienna, Austria. Scientists solved some long-standing puzzles in biology, including why chromosome shape influences the functioning of the molecular machines that repair breaks in DNA, a significant finding that expands understanding of how chromosome anomalies occur.Chromosomes are broken and rearranged at many positions during meiosis, the development of gametes (egg and sperm cells) to ensure variety of genetic combinations in each gamete.This specialized cell division process ensures sexual reproduction. Meiosis results in daughter cells containing a single, complete set of chromosomes, while body cells contain two sets. During fertilization, when sperm and egg fuse, their sets of chromosomes are combined to form a diploid embryo to close the cycle. DNA Break Machines Loops of sister chromatids (blue and turquoise) are linked and held in shape by ring-shaped molecules. Click Pic for DetailsUsing state of the art technology, the research group of Franz Klein, professor for genetics at the Max F. Perutz Laboratories of the University of Vienna, has analyzed this process at high resolution. The surprising observations regarding the mechanism of meiosis are now published in the journal Cell.Meiosis Enigma There are 46 chromosomes in every human cell, 23 maternal and 23 paternal ones. When germ cells are produced, one aspect of the reduction in chromosome numbers comes from merging maternal and paternal chromosomes to form a single daughter chromosome — a mechanisms called recombination. "The more we learn about meiosis, the more mysterious it becomes", says Franz Klein from the Department for Chromosome Biology of the University of Vienna. "It is surprising that maternal and paternal chromosomes find each other at all. Because at the time of interaction all chromosomes have generated a sister and are tightly connected with her like a Siamese twin. Normally, in non-meiotic cells, chromosomes only interact and exchange with the sister chromosome. However, during the development of germ cells, only the exchange between parental chromosomes can guarantee the production of daughter cells with the right number of chromosomes", explains Klein. Nano-view of the chromosome Franz Klein and his research team have analyzed components of the protein machinery, which initiates recombination by DNA-breakage. They created a high resolution map of the chromosomes and marked the interaction sites with those proteins. "Thanks to DNA microarray-technology, we get a resolution in the nanometer range, with insights unimaginable before", says Klein. The researchers were surprised to find the DNA-breaking machine tightly associated with chromosomal axis regions, instead of being soluble - an observation with far reaching consequences.Disposable machines One of the many riddles in meiosis was how breaks on chromosomes impede the occurrence of other breaks in their vicinity. Earlier research had shown that each individual DNA-breakage complex only works a single time. "As we now know that these machines are anchored, we understand why there is preferentially a single break per region. The locally bound machine has fired and other machines can't get there as they are anchored to other chromosomal regions", explains Klein. When chromosomes are out of shape Healthy chromosomes can form DNA loops, which are, in meiosis, connected by a protein axis. Defective genes can cause chromosomes to lose this shape. "No one could understand why the shape of chromosomes influences the function of the DNA-break machines. Now we know that these machines have to anchor between loops on the chromosome axis. If their loop-environment changes they anchor in different regions or lose functionality altogether", says Klein. Hyperactive sister Sister chromosomes are connected like Siamese twins along the chromosome axis, where the DNA-break machines are anchored. It was very mysterious, how the sister chromosome is prevented to take part in the repair of DNA breaks during meiosis, despite being so close to the damage. A special feature of meiosis is the formation of a zone along the chromosome axis that inhibits recombination. Franz Klein concludes: "We think that the DNA-break machines are anchored at the axis to position the breaks right within the recombination inhibiting zone. This may attract the sister chromosome loop, which remains trapped in the recombination inhibiting zone by one of the two ends flanking the break, while the second end docks off to form a search tentacle for finding the paternal chromosome." "We have evidence for many details of this scenario — but most importantly, the inhibition of the involvement of the sister breaks down, if the anchoring of the DNA-break machines is defective. This indicates that anchoring may be indeed a key mechanism to control the sister. The result of a sister, hyperactive for DNA-break repair in meiosis is the death or severe impairment of the developing embryo." FundingThe published work was conducted within the framework of the Special Research Program F34-"Dynamic Chromosomes" of the FWF.
ParticipationSeven research groups of the Max F. Perutz Laboratories of the University of Vienna and the Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP) collaborate in F34 research program to study questions of chromosome biology. Coordination: Franz Klein and Jan Michael Peters, this year's Wittgenstein awardee.
CitationSpo11-Accessory Proteins Link Double-Strand Break Sites to the Chromosome Axis in Early Meiotic Recombination. Silvia Panizza, Marco A. Mendoza, Marc Berlinger, Lingzhi Huang, Alain Nicolas, Katsuhiko Shirahige, Franz Klein. Cell 2011; 146(3): 372-383. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2011.07.003
Highlights ● Pre-DSB recombinosome components Rec114, Mer2, and Mei4 bind to chromosome axis sites ● Binding requires S phase Cdk and axial element components and is modulated by cohesion ● Loss of axis site binding correlates with loss of DSBs in budding yeast ● The DSB machinery may link hotspots to axis sites prior to DSB formation Abstract Meiotic recombination between homologous chromosomes initiates via programmed DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), generated by complexes comprising Spo11 transesterase plus accessory proteins. DSBs arise concomitantly with the development of axial chromosome structures, where the coalescence of axis sites produces linear arrays of chromatin loops. Recombining DNA sequences map to loops, but are ultimately tethered to the underlying axis. How and when such tethering occurs is currently unclear. Using ChIPchip in yeast, we show that Spo11-accessory proteins Rec114, Mer2, and Mei4 stably interact with chromosome axis sequences, upon phosphorylation of Mer2 by S phase Cdk. This axis tethering requires meiotic axis components (Red1/Hop1) and is modulated in a domain-specific fashion by cohesin. Loss of Rec114, Mer2, and Mei4 binding correlates with loss of DSBs. Our results strongly suggest that hotspot sequences become tethered to axis sites by the DSB machinery prior to DSB formation.
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 10 August 2011 11:49 |



Vienna, Austria. Scientists solved some long-standing puzzles in biology, including why
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