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1.
Meiotic recombination within the centromere of a yeast chromosome   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
L S Symington  T D Petes 《Cell》1988,52(2):237-240
In order to examine the frequency of nonreciprocal recombination (gene conversion) within the centromere of the yeast chromosome, we constructed strains that contained heterozygous restriction sites in the conserved centromere sequences of chromosome III in addition to heterozygous markers flanking the centromere. One of these markers was the selectable URA3 gene, which was inserted less than one kb from the centromere. We found that meiotic conversion of the URA3 gene occurred at normal frequency (about 2% of unselected tetrads) and that more than one-third of these convertants coconverted the markers within the centromere. In addition, we observed tetrads in which conversion events extended through the centromere to include a marker on the opposite side from URA3. We conclude that meiotic conversion events occur within the centromere at rates similar to other genomic sequences.  相似文献   
2.
Heteroduplexes formed between DNA strands derived from different homologous chromosomes are an intermediate in meiotic crossing over in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and other eucaryotes. A heteroduplex formed between wild-type and mutant genes will contain a base pair mismatch; failure to repair this mismatch will lead to postmeiotic segregation (PMS). By analyzing the frequency of PMS for various mutant alleles in the yeast HIS4 gene, we showed that C/C mismatches were inefficiently repaired relative to all other point mismatches. These other mismatches (G/G, G/A, T/T, A/A, T/C, C/A, A/A, and T/G) were repaired with approximately the same efficiency. We found that in spores with unrepaired mismatches in heteroduplexes, the nontranscribed strand of the HIS4 gene was more frequently donated than the transcribed strand. In addition, the direction of repair for certain mismatches was nonrandom.  相似文献   
3.
Borrelia burgdorferi is a spirochete pathogen transmitted among warm- blooded hosts by ixodid ticks. Frequency-dependent selection for variant outer-surface proteins might be expected to arise in this species, since rare variants are more likely to avoid immune surveillance in previously infected hosts. We sequenced the OspA and OspB genes of nine North American strains and compared them with nine strains previously described. For each gene, the mean number of synonymous substitutions per synonymous site and the mean number of nonsynonymous substitutions per nonsynonymous site show only a twofold excess of silent mutations. Synonymous rates vary widely along the OspB protein. Some regions show a significant excess of silent substitutions, while divergence in other regions is constrained by biased base composition or selection. The presence, in antigenically important regions of the protein, of significant variation among strains, as well as evidence for recombination among strains, should be considered in attempts to develop vaccines against this disease.   相似文献   
4.
Location of the 5.8S rRNA gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Direct DNA sequence analysis of Saccharomyces cerevisiae ribosomal DNA cloned in an Escherichia coli plasmid revealed part of the structural gene for 5.8S rRNA at one end of a 700-base-pair EcoRI fragment. Taken with the previously established EcoRI restriction map of the ribosomal repeat unit, this sequence establishes that the yeast 5.8S RNA segment is located between the 18S and 28S segments in the 42S rRNA precursor and in the DNA which codes for it.  相似文献   
5.
The kinetochore is the macromolecular protein complex that mediates chromosome segregation. The Dsn1 component is crucial for kinetochore assembly and is phosphorylated by the Aurora B kinase. We found that Aurora B phosphorylation of Dsn1 promotes the interaction between outer and inner kinetochore proteins in budding yeast.  相似文献   
6.
Mismatch-repair (MMR) systems promote eukaryotic genome stability by removing errors introduced during DNA replication and by inhibiting recombination between nonidentical sequences (spellchecker and antirecombination activities, respectively). Following a common mismatch-recognition step effected by MutS-homologous Msh proteins, homologs of the bacterial MutL ATPase (predominantly the Mlh1p-Pms1p heterodimer in yeast) couple mismatch recognition to the appropriate downstream processing steps. To examine whether the processing steps in the spellchecker and antirecombination pathways might differ, we mutagenized the yeast PMS1 gene and screened for mitotic separation-of-function alleles. Two alleles affecting only the antirecombination function of Pms1p were identified, one of which changed an amino acid within the highly conserved ATPase domain. To more specifically address the role of ATP binding/hydrolysis in MMR-related processes, we examined mutations known to compromise the ATPase activity of Pms1p or Mlh1p with respect to the mitotic spellchecker and antirecombination activities and with respect to the repair of mismatches present in meiotic recombination intermediates. The results of these analyses confirm a differential requirement for the Pms1p ATPase activity in replication vs. recombination processes, while demonstrating that the Mlh1p ATPase activity is important for all examined MMR-related functions.  相似文献   
7.
8.
Long poly(dA).poly(dT) tracts (poly(A) tracts), regions of DNA containing at least 20 contiguous dA residues on one strand and dT residues on the complementary strand, are found in about 2 X 10(4) copies interspersed throughout the human genome. Using poly(dA).poly(dA) as a hybridization probe, we identified recombinant lambda phage that contained inserts of human DNA with poly(A) tracts. Three such tracts have been characterized by restriction mapping and sequence analysis. One major poly(A) tract is present within each insert and is composed of from 28 to 35 A residues. In each case, the poly(A) tract directly abuts the 3' end of the human Alu element, indicating that the major class of poly(A) tracts in the human genome is associated with this family of repeats. The poly(A) tracts are also adjacent to A-rich sequences and, in one case, to a polypurine tract, having the structure GA3-GA3-GA4-GA6-GA5-GA4. We suggest that repetitive cycles of unequal crossing over may give rise to both the long poly(A) and polypurine tracts observed in this study.  相似文献   
9.
10.
We examined the effects of mutations in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae RAD27 (encoding a nuclease involved in the processing of Okazaki fragments) and POL3 (encoding DNA polymerase δ) genes on the stability of a minisatellite sequence (20-bp repeats) and microsatellites (1- to 8-bp repeat units). Both the rad27 and pol3-t mutations destabilized both classes of repeats, although the types of tract alterations observed in the two mutant strains were different. The tract alterations observed in rad27 strains were primarily additions, and those observed in pol3-t strains were primarily deletions. Measurements of the rates of repetitive tract alterations in strains with both rad27 and pol3-t indicated that the stimulation of microsatellite instability by rad27 was reduced by the effects of the pol3-t mutation. We also found that rad27 and pol3-01 (an allele carrying a mutation in the “proofreading” exonuclease domain of DNA polymerase δ) mutations were synthetically lethal.All eukaryotic genomes thus far examined contain many simple repetitive DNA sequences, tracts of DNA with one or a small number of bases repeated multiple times (48). These repetitive regions can be classified as microsatellites (small repeat units in tandem arrays 10 to 60 bp in length) and minisatellites (larger repeat units in tandem arrays several hundred base pairs to several kilobase pairs in length). In this paper, arrays with repeat units 14 bp or less will be considered microsatellites and arrays with longer repeat units will be considered minisatellites.Previous studies show that simple repetitive sequences are unstable relative to “normal” DNA sequences, frequently undergoing additions or deletions of repeat units, in Escherichia coli (24), Saccharomyces cerevisiae (12), and mammals (59). This mutability has two important consequences. First, it results in polymorphic loci that are useful in genetic mapping and forensic studies (15, 59). Second, although these repetitive tracts are usually located outside of coding sequences, alterations in the lengths of microsatellites or minisatellites located within coding sequences can produce frameshift mutations or novel protein variants (20, 22, 26).From studies of the effects of various mutations on microsatellite stability in yeast and E. coli (40) and the analysis of mutational changes caused by DNA polymerase in vitro (21), it is likely that most alterations reflect DNA polymerase slippage events (47). These events involve the transient dissociation of the primer and template strands during the replication of a microsatellite (Fig. (Fig.1).1). If the strands reassociate to yield an unpaired repeat on the primer strand, the net result is an addition of repeats (following a second round of DNA replication). Unpaired repeats on the template strand would result in a deletion by the same mechanism. Open in a separate windowFIG. 1“Classical” model for the generation of microsatellite alterations by DNA polymerase slippage. Two single strands of a replicating DNA molecule are shown, with each repeat unit indicated by a rectangle. Arrows indicate the 3′ ends of the strand, and the top and bottom strands represent the elongating primer strand and the template strand, respectively. Step 1, the primer and template strand dissociate; step 2, the primer and template strands reassociate in a misaligned configuration, resulting in an unpaired repeat on either the template strand (left side) or primer strand (right side); step 3, DNA synthesis is completed. If the unpaired repeats are not excised by the DNA mismatch repair system, after the next round of DNA synthesis one DNA molecule will be shortened by one repeat (left side) or lengthened by one repeat (right side).A number of mutations have been shown to elevate microsatellite instability. In E. coli (24, 46), yeast (44, 45), and mammalian cells (27), mutations in genes affecting DNA mismatch repair dramatically elevate the instability of a dinucleotide microsatellite. The most likely explanation of this result is that the DNA mismatches (unpaired repeats) resulting from DNA polymerase slippage events are efficiently removed from the newly synthesized strand by the DNA mismatch repair system. Thus, in the absence of mismatch repair, tract instability is elevated. From genetic studies, it has been found that mismatch repair in yeast efficiently corrects DNA mismatches involving 1- to 14-base loops (the size of the repeat units in microsatellites) but fails to correct mismatches involving loops larger than 16 bases (the size of the repeat units in minisatellites) (3, 41, 53). An inefficient mechanism, not involving the classical DNA mismatch repair system, is capable of correcting large DNA loops formed during meiotic recombination (19).In addition to mutations affecting DNA mismatch repair, some mutations affecting DNA replication in yeast destabilize microsatellites. Yeast strains bearing a null mutation in the RAD27 (RTH1) gene have high levels of instability of the dinucleotide poly(GT) and the trinucleotide CAG, specifically elevating single-repeat insertions (18, 39). RAD27 encodes the homolog of the mammalian FEN-1 protein, a 5′-to-3′ exonuclease (10, 11, 33). This nuclease activity is required for removing the terminal ribonucleotide residue from the 5′ end of the Okazaki fragment (9, 14, 35, 54, 55, 57); this step is necessary for the two adjoining fragments to be ligated together. FEN-1 appears to be active as either an exonuclease in the presence of a single-stranded gap upstream of the 5′ terminus or an endonuclease on a 5′ flap structure (13, 34). Since yeast strains that contain a null mutation in RAD27 grow poorly but are viable (38, 43), it is likely that less efficient nuclease activities that are also capable of 5′ Okazaki fragment processing are present in yeast. In addition to destabilizing dinucleotide microsatellites, rad27 strains have high levels of spontaneous mitotic recombination, elevated rates of forward mutation, and increased sensitivity to the alkylating agent methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) (18, 38, 43). In contrast to the mutations normally seen in mismatch repair mutants, i.e., point mutations or small frameshifts, the types of mutations observed in the absence of Rad27p are duplications of sequences flanked by short direct repeats (4 to 7 bp in length) (49). These duplications were not affected by the DNA mismatch repair system.The same class of sequences that are duplicated in the rad27 strains show an elevated rate (up to 1,000-fold) of deletion in strains containing a temperature-sensitive allele (pol3-t) of the yeast gene encoding DNA polymerase δ (52, 53). This mutant (initially named tex1) was isolated in a strain that exhibited an increased excision rate of a bacterial transposon with long terminal repeats inserted within a yeast gene (7). The pol3-t allele, which encodes a mutation (Gly641 to Ala641) (51) located near the putative nucleotide binding and active-site domains of the enzyme (58), is thought to diminish the rate of lagging-strand synthesis resulting in long stretches of single-stranded DNA on the lagging-strand template (8). This single-stranded DNA may have the potential to form intrastrand base-paired structures, creating interactions between short direct repeats. These interactions would result in an increased frequency of deletions caused by DNA polymerase slippage.Since rad27 and pol3-t mutations elevate the rates of duplications and deletions associated with short separated repeats in nonrepetitive DNA sequences, Kunkel et al. (22) suggested that these mutations could also destabilize minisatellites. In this paper, we examine the effects of rad27 and pol3-t mutations on the stability of simple repeats in which the repeat unit length varies between 1 and 20 bp. Our results show that both mutations destabilize both microsatellites and minisatellites, but that the mechanisms involved in the destabilization are different for the two mutations.  相似文献   
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