| Literature DB >> 31547623 |
Ju-Li Jing1, Ting Zhang2, Ya-Zhong Wang3, Yan He4.
Abstract
Meiosis is an essential cell-division process for ensuring genetic diversity across generations. Meiotic recombination ensures the accuracy of genetic interchange between homolous chromosomes and segregation of parental alleles. Programmed DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), catalyzed by the evolutionarily conserved topoisomerase VIA (a subunit of the archaeal type II DNA topoisomerase)-like enzyme Spo11 and several other factors, is a distinctive feature of meiotic recombination initiation. The meiotic DSB formation and its regulatory mechanisms are similar among species, but certain aspects are distinct. In this review, we introduced the cumulative knowledge of the plant proteins crucial for meiotic DSB formation and technical advances in DSB detection. We also summarized the genome-wide DSB hotspot profiles for different model organisms. Moreover, we highlighted the classical views and recent advances in our knowledge of the regulatory mechanisms that ensure the fidelity of DSB formation, such as multifaceted kinase-mediated phosphorylation and the consequent high-dimensional changes in chromosome structure. We provided an overview of recent findings concerning DSB formation, distribution and regulation, all of which will help us to determine whether meiotic DSB formation is evolutionarily conserved or varies between plants and other organisms.Entities:
Keywords: DSB regulation; chromatin; double-strand break (DSB); homologous recombination; hotspot; meiosis; plants
Year: 2019 PMID: 31547623 PMCID: PMC6801837 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20194718
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Characterized proteins involved in meiotic double-strand breaks (DSB) formation in different organisms.
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| DFO | ||||
| PRD1 | MEI1 | |||
| PRD2 | Mei4 | Rec24 | MEI4 | |
| PRD3 | PAIR1 | Mer2/Rec107 | Rec15 | IHO1 |
| Spo11-1,2 | Spo11-1,4 | Spo11 | Rec12 | SPO11 |
| TopoVI B | TopoVI B | TopoVI B | ||
| P31comet/BVF1 | P31comet | |||
| SDS | SDS | |||
| - | CRC1 | |||
| Rec102 | ||||
| Rec104 | ||||
| Rec6 | ||||
| Rec114 | Rec7 | REC114 | ||
| Rec10 | ||||
| Ski8/Rec103 | Rec14 | WDR61 | ||
| Mde2 | ||||
| MRE11 | Mre11 | Rad32 | ||
| RAD50 | Rad50 | Rad50 | RAD50 | |
| NBS1 | Xrs2 | Nbs1 | NBS1 |
Meiotic DSB hotspots identified in different species by SPO11-oligo mapping or single-stranded DNA sequencing (SSDS).
| Species | Genome Size | Chromosome No. | Number of DSBs | DSB Hotspot No. | Most Common | Average Width (kb) | Predominantly | Method | Hotspot Detection | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12.1 Mb | 16 | ~175 | 3604–4099 | Gene promoters | 0.248–0.264 | Ty retrotransposons | SPO11-oligos | Enrichment threshold | [ | |
| 12.1 Mb | 16 | ~175 | 4177 | Gene promoters | 0.265 | n/a | SPO11-oligos | Enrichment threshold | [ | |
| 12.1 Mb | 16 | ~175 | 3881 | Gene promoters | 0.256 | n/a | SPO11-oligos | Enrichment threshold | [ | |
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| 13.8 Mb | 3 | ~60 | 603 | All chromosome regions | 1.4 | n/a | Rec12-oligos | Enrichment threshold | [ |
| 2.8 Gb | 20 | ~250 | 9874– | Intergenic | ~2.000–3.400 | LTR retrotransposons | SSDS | Peak calling | [ | |
| 2.8 Gb | 20 | ~250 | 14,869 | Intergenic | ~2.000 | n/a | SSDS | Peak calling | [ | |
| 2.8 Gb | 20 | ~250 | 15,481 | Intergenic | ~2.000 | n/a | SSDS | Peak calling | [ | |
| 2.8 Gb | 20 | ~250 | 18,313 | Intergenic | ~2.000 | n/a | SSDS | Peak calling | [ | |
| 2.8 Gb | 20 | ~250 | 13,960 | Intergenic | ~0.281 | n/a | SPO11-oligos | Enrichment threshold | [ | |
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| 135 Mb | 5 | ~250–300 | 5914 | Gene promoters and terminators | 0.823 | Helitron /Pogo/Tc1/Mariner DNA transposons | SPO11-1-oligos | Peak calling | [ |
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| 2.4 Gb | 10 | ~500 | 3126 | All chromosome regions | 1.2 | Gypsy retrotransposons | SSDS | Peak calling | [ |
Figure 1Schematic network of CDK- and ATM/ATR-mediated regulatory cycles of meiotic DSB timing and number in S. cerevisiae. (A) CDK phosphorylates Mer2 during pre-meiotic DNA replication [114,115,120]. (B) Phosphorylated Mer2 recruits Rec114, Mei4, Spo11 and other DSB proteins to DSB hotspot sites [45,120,121]. (C) DSB formation catalyzed by Spo11 and accessary proteins [4,66]. (D) Recurrent DSB formation activates TEL1/MEC1-dependent positive- and negative-feedback loops, which then restrains Spo11 activity and regulates the rate and number of DSB formation [136,140,147,156]. (E) Cis DSB interference mediated by TEL1 reduces the frequency of coincident DSB formation at the region adjacent to an already-formed DSB [143,149]. Trans inhibition mediated by TEL1 and MEC1 describes the ability of a DSB formation on one chromosome to suppress DSB formation on its homolog and sister chromatid at the same or adjacent regions [141].
Figure 2Different ‘tethered loop–axis complex’ models in S. cerevisiae, M. musculus and plants. (A) In S. cerevisiae, Spp1 recognizes and binds to DSB hotspots adjacent to H3K4me2/3 on loops via interaction with axis-bound Mer2 [55,161,162]. (B) In M. musculus, CXXC1 interacts with PRDM9 and IHO2, which designates DSB hotspots in loops and is located on chromosome axes, respectively; this interaction tethers the chromatin loop to the axis for DSB formation [158,163,164,165,166]. (C) In plants, the major players involved in bridging chromatin loops with axis remain uncharacterized [88,91,167,168,169].