| Literature DB >> 24009525 |
Mariko Sasaki1, Sam E Tischfield, Megan van Overbeek, Scott Keeney.
Abstract
Meiotic recombination is initiated by large numbers of developmentally programmed DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), ranging from dozens to hundreds per cell depending on the organism. DSBs formed in single-copy sequences provoke recombination between allelic positions on homologous chromosomes, but DSBs can also form in and near repetitive elements such as retrotransposons. When they do, they create a risk for deleterious genome rearrangements in the germ line via recombination between non-allelic repeats. A prior study in budding yeast demonstrated that insertion of a Ty retrotransposon into a DSB hotspot can suppress meiotic break formation, but properties of Ty elements in their most common physiological contexts have not been addressed. Here we compile a comprehensive, high resolution map of all Ty elements in the rapidly and efficiently sporulating S. cerevisiae strain SK1 and examine DSB formation in and near these endogenous retrotransposable elements. SK1 has 30 Tys, all but one distinct from the 50 Tys in S288C, the source strain for the yeast reference genome. From whole-genome DSB maps and direct molecular assays, we find that DSB levels and chromatin structure within and near Tys vary widely between different elements and that local DSB suppression is not a universal feature of Ty presence. Surprisingly, deletion of two Ty elements weakened adjacent DSB hotspots, revealing that at least some Ty insertions promote rather than suppress nearby DSB formation. Given high strain-to-strain variability in Ty location and the high aggregate burden of Ty-proximal DSBs, we propose that meiotic recombination is an important component of host-Ty interactions and that Tys play critical roles in genome instability and evolution in both inbred and outcrossed sexual cycles.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24009525 PMCID: PMC3757047 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003732
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Figure 1Location of Ty elements in SK1.
The insertion sites and orientations of SK1 Ty elements are shown in comparison to S288C Tys (chromosomal coordinates are from S288C). Fragmented arrowheads indicate partial Ty elements. Open circles show centromeres. Dashed circle highlights the only Ty shared between the two strains.
Location of Ty elements in SK1.
| Chr | Name | Start | End | Family | Strand | tRNA | Target seq. |
| I | Ty | 180826 | 180845 | Ty1 | − | + |
|
| II | Ty | 9462 | 9463 | Ty1 | + | + | N.D. |
| III | Ty | 1180 | 4322 | Ty5 | + | − | N.D. |
| III | Ty | 151729 | 151730 | Ty2 | − | + |
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| III | Ty | 173740 | 173741 | Ty1 | − | − |
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| IV | Ty | 992677 | 992678 | Ty1 | + | + |
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| IV | Ty | 992677 | 992678 | Ty1 or Ty2 | − | + | N.D. |
| IV | Ty | 1095501 | 1095502 | Ty1 | − | + |
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| IV | Ty | 1151116 | 1151117 | Ty1 | + | + |
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| V | Ty | 79534 | 79535 | Ty2 | − | − |
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| V | Ty | 116283 | 116284 | Ty1 | + | − |
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| V | Ty | 449646 | 449647 | Ty1 | + | + | N.D. |
| VI | Ty | 137731 | 137732 | Ty1 | + | + | N.D. |
| VII | Ty | 74930 | 74931 | Ty2 | + | + |
|
| VII | Ty | 441007 | 441008 | Ty1 | − | + |
|
| VII | Ty | 544849 | 544850 | Ty1 | − | + |
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| VII | Ty | 794408 | 794409 | Ty1 | + | + |
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| IX | Ty | 336955 | 336956 | Ty1 | − | + |
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| X | Ty | 204645 | 204646 | Ty1 | + | + |
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| XI | Ty | 301921 | 301922 | Ty1 | + | + |
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| XI | Ty | 578126 | 578127 | Ty1 | − | + |
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| XII | Ty | 793754 | 793755 | Ty2 | + | + |
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| XIII | Ty | 504714 | 504715 | Ty1 | − | + |
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| XIV | Ty | 96517 | 96521 | Ty1 | − | + |
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| XIV | Ty | 560747 | 560748 | Ty2 | + | + |
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| XIV | Ty | 560747 | 560748 | Ty1 or Ty2 | − | + | N.D. |
| XIV | Ty | 569954 | 569955 | Ty3 | − | + |
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| XVI | Ty | 339200 | 339402 | Ty1 | − | + | – |
| XVI | Ty | 776100 | 776101 | Ty1 | + | + |
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| XVI | Ty | 859975 | 859976 | Ty1 | + | + |
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The coordinates of Ty insertion sites are based on the S288C reference genome (the June 2008 assembly from the Saccharomyces Genome Database). When a Ty insertion site exhibits a 5-bp duplication, the third and fourth bp are used as the start and end coordinates, respectively.
Although the family of Ty and Ty could not be determined by established criteria [11] (Figure S1D), these Tys were classified as Ty1 by Gabriel et al. (2006).
The presence (+) or absence (−) of tRNA in the same intergenic region with a Ty is indicated.
The target site sequence duplicated on the same strand with a Ty is indicated. N.D. indicates that the presence or absence of sequence duplication was not determined. “–” indicates that sequence duplication was not observed.
Ty element is inserted in a novel SK1 LTR. The insertion site of the LTR is indicated.
Ty and Ty are located in subtelomeric regions, which are enriched with repeated sequences and are dynamic among strains [65]. Since chromosome ends are not well defined in the SK1 genome assembly, it remains to be determined which chromosome end(s) carry these Tys.
Ty is the same as YCLWTy5-1 in S288C.
A full-length Ty and a fragmented Ty of >1 kb in size are located adjacent to each other.
Ty is a ∼1-kb fragmented Ty.
TyNCE103-YNL035C-1 is disrupted by TyNCE103-YNL035C-2.
Figure 2Identifying Ty insertion sites.
(A) SK1-derived sequence reads aligned to the S288C genome. Red arrows connected by dotted lines represent paired ends that align near one another. Blue arrows are orphan reads whose mates are aligned inconsistently, e.g., to different chromosomes. Expected patterns are shown for a region where the SK1 genome matches the reference genome, and regions containing a deletion or insertion. (B) Snapshot of the SGRP browser in a simplified cartoon form, depicting SK1-derived reads mapped near YCLWTy5-1. The color scheme is as in (A), plus light brown arrows for reads whose paired ends were not sequenced. (C, D) Confirmation of Ty insertions in SK1 by PCR at URA3 (C) or the YMR118C-ASI1 intergenic region (D). Smaller bands amplified from SK1 genomic DNA are ex vivo deletion products from LTR-LTR recombination during PCR. (E) SK1 sequence reads mapped to the S288C genome near FCF1. Black bars indicate where SK1 Ty1 or Ty2 were previously mapped [25]. Vertical pink arrow shows the single Ty position mapped in this study. The tandemly duplicated gene pair of HXT6 and HXT7 present in S288C is a single copy in SK1, without the intervening sequence.
Figure 3Systematic Ty mapping.
(A) Mapping strategy. (B) Ty in the PEX25-CAR1 intergenic region. (C) Number of SGRP reads supporting each Ty position in SK1. The observed distribution of read frequencies around each of 28 Ty sites is compared to that expected from a Poisson distribution with the same mean (λ = 8.6). (D) Copy number of Tys from different families in SK1 and S288C.
Figure 4Meiotic DSBs in and around Ty elements.
(A) Spo11 oligo densities around Ty elements. For each SK1 Ty, Spo11 oligo densities (hits per million mapped reads (hpM) per kb) were determined in the indicated window of adjacent sequence. Sites where Tys are present in S288C but absent in SK1 serve as controls. Bars are means and standard deviations; the dashed line is the genome average; p values are from Wilcoxon rank sum tests. For comparison, the internal Spo11 oligo density averaged across all Ty elements was 6.7 hpM/kb, approximately 30–40-fold lower than the mean for these flanking regions. (B) Spo11 oligo densities around Ty elements in different types of intergenic regions. (C–F) Physical detection of DSBs. (Left) Spo11 oligo distribution from Pan et al. (2011) and maps of ORFs (blue-filled polygons) and tRNA genes (horizontal bars). (Right) Southern blots of genomic DNA isolated from spo11-Y135F, sae2Δ and dmc1Δ strains at 6 hrs after entry into meiosis. Red numbers are DSB frequencies within the bracketed regions in each lane (% of total hybridization signal in the lane); quantification is provided separately for each lane, representing independent cultures. Red bars, probe positions; P, unbroken (parental) restriction fragments; asterisks, cross hybridizing bands. Flanking restriction sites plus internal sites used to generate genomic DNA markers (run on the same gels; not shown) are indicated: NcoI (N), BsaXI (XI), PpuMI (MI), Bsu36I (Bs), BglII (Bg), BspHI (HI), BamHI (B), ApaLI (Ap), SnaBI (Sn), NdeI (Nd). In (F), the inset shows a more exposed contrast of the phosphorimager signal for the region indicated by the dashed line. (G) Quantitative agreement between Spo11 oligo counts and DSB frequencies at hotspots near Ty elements in dmc1Δ mutants. DSB values are the means of the two independent cultures shown in panels C–F.
Figure 5Chromatin structures of Ty elements.
(A) Preferential MNase cleavage of chromatin in nucleosome-depleted regions (NDR) and linkers between nucleosomes. (B–C) MNase sensitivity of regions in and around Ty (B) and Ty (C). Intact meiotic nuclei were treated with 0, 2.5×10−5, or 5×10−5 units of MNase per µg of DNA (lanes 1–3) and purified genomic DNA (N, for naked DNA) from vegetative cells was treated with 1.6×10−4 units per µg DNA (lane 4), then MNase cleavage patterns were determined by Southern blotting and indirect end-labeling. Genomic DNA prepared from meiotic sae2Δ cells is a marker for DSB positions (lane 5). Profiles of lanes 1 (−MNase), 3 (+MNase), and 5 (DSBs) are shown to the right of each blot. Red bars on ORF maps indicate probe positions.
Figure 6Deleting Ty elements increases DSB formation nearby.
(A–D) Genomic DNA was isolated from meiotic cultures of a dmc1Δ strain containing the full complement of SK1 Tys and dmc1Δ strains in which either Ty or Ty was deleted. DSBs were detected by Southern blotting and indirect end-labeling. Figures are labeled as in Figures 4C–F. Circled lower case roman numerals indicate hotspots discussed in the text. Red numerals are DSB frequencies within the bracketed regions in each of two independent cultures, corrected where appropriate for differences in transfer efficiency for the parental fragments (see Materials and Methods). Blots were stripped and rehybridized to probes from separate loci to serve as loading controls (lower panels). (A,B) DSBs around the Ty insertion site, probed from either side. (C,D) DSBs around the Ty insertion site, probed from either side. (E) DSBs at the YCR048W hotspot (control locus) in the same samples as in panels A–D.