ENHANCED GENE CONVERSION AND POSTMEIOTIC SEGREGATION IN PACHYTENE-ARRESTED SACCHAROMYCES CEREVISIAE
Author(s) -
Lance S. Davidow,
Breck Byers
Publication year - 1984
Publication title -
genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1943-2631
pISSN - 0016-6731
DOI - 10.1093/genetics/106.2.165
Subject(s) - meiosis , biology , mitotic crossover , genetics , saccharomyces cerevisiae , gene conversion , recombination , genetic recombination , allele , homologous recombination , chromosomal crossover , locus (genetics) , tetrad , gene , mating of yeast , microbiology and biotechnology
Previous study has demonstrated that incubation of yeast cells of strain AP-1 in sporulation medium at 36° permits them to begin meiosis but that they become arrested at pachytene and undergo enhanced intragenic recombination between ade2 heteroalleles. Tetrad analysis was undertaken to characterize the altered program of meiotic recombination more widely. In one set of experiments, pachytene-arrested cells were permitted to resume sporulation upon transfer to the permissive temperature. In the resulting asci, both postmeiotic segregation and gene conversion were increased several-fold at a number of loci relative to unarrested controls, whereas reciprocal recombination increased two- to threefold. Another set of experiments analyzed the genetic consequences of inducing the pachytene-arrested cells to revert directly to mitotic growth without completion of meiosis. The appearance of homozygous sectors from heterozygous markers revealed that these cells had become committed to appreciable recombination but that reciprocal exchange was less frequent than in normal asci. Taken together, the data indicate that pachytene arrest rendered the cells committed to enhanced recombination upon resumption of sporulation but that most of the crossing over did not occur until release from the arrest. —The genetic basis of pachytene arrest by AP-1 was investigated by mating each of its parents with progeny of strain Y55, which is able to sporulate at 36°. Both of these diploids sporulated at 36°, and asci from the one studied further exhibited 2:2 segregation of the sporulation defect, indicating that pachytene arrest is dependent on a recessive, temperature-sensitive allele at a chromosomal locus.
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