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First published online May 2, 2002; 10.1105/tpc.001271
American Society of Plant Biologists Extensive Interallelic Polymorphisms Drive Meiotic Recombination into a Crossover Pathway
a Waksman Institute, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey 08855 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail dooner{at}waksman.rutgers.edu; fax 732-445-5735
Recombinants isolated from most meiotic intragenic recombination experiments in maize, but not in yeast, are borne principally on crossover chromosomes. This excess of crossovers is not explained readily by the canonical double-strand break repair model of recombination, proposed to account for a large body of yeast data, which predicts that crossovers (COs) and noncrossovers (NCOs) should be recovered equally. An attempt has been made here to identify general rules governing the recovery of the CO and NCO classes of intragenic recombinants in maize. Recombination was analyzed in bz heterozygotes between a variety of mutations derived from the same or different progenitor alleles. The mutations include point mutations, transposon insertions, and transposon excision footprints. Consequently, the differences between the bz heteroalleles ranged from just two nucleotides to many nucleotides, indels, and insertions. In this article, allelic pairs differing at only two positions are referred to as dimorphic to distinguish them from polymorphic pairs, which differ at multiple positions. The present study has revealed the following effects at these bz heteroalleles: (1) recombination between polymorphic heteroalleles produces mostly CO chromosomes; (2) recombination between dimorphic heteroalleles produces both CO and NCO chromosomes, in ratios apparently dependent on the nature of the heteroalleles; and (3) in dimorphic heterozygotes, the two NCO classes are recovered in approximately equal numbers when the two mutations are point mutations but not when one or both mutations are insertions. These observations are discussed in light of a recent version of the double-strand break repair model of recombination that postulates separate pathways for the formation of CO and NCO products.
Recombination experiments in yeast and maize have revealed a striking difference between the two organisms in the fraction of meiotic intragenic recombinants (IGRs) that are associated with an exchange of flanking markers. Most IGRs in maize are borne on crossover chromosomes (for review, see Dooner and Martínez-Férez, 1997
The maize heteroalleles used in recombination experiments generally have been unrelated in origin, and because transposon-induced mutations are common and easy to map molecularly, one of the two alleles in the heterozygote often has been an insertion mutation (Dooner, 1986
Subsequent sequencing of the progenitor alleles of the bz (Ralston et al., 1988
Here, the issue of flanking marker recovery among IGRs at the bz locus is reexamined. In an attempt to distinguish the potentially confounding effects of insertions and multiple sequence heterologies, intragenic recombination has been analyzed in heterozygotes between a variety of mutations derived from either the same or different progenitor alleles. The mutations include point mutations induced by ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS), transposon insertions, and transposon excision footprints. Consequently, the differences between the heteroalleles studied range from just two bases to extensive sequence and structural polymorphisms. Alleles that differ at only two positions will be referred to as dimorphic and those that differ at multiple positions will be referred to as polymorphic, regardless of the nature of the differences. This comprehensive study has enabled the following general observations to be made. (1) Most recombination between extensively polymorphic alleles results in an exchange of flanking markers, regardless of whether one of the alleles is an insertion. (2) Recombination between dimorphic heteroalleles (i.e., derived from the same progenitor and differing only at the two points between which recombination is being measured) often is not accompanied by an exchange of flanking markers. (3) Unequal recovery of the two parentally marked classes can occur in dimorphic heterozygotes but seems to be a function of the nature of the mutation, not of the relative position of the mutation within the gene.
These observations are discussed in light of a recent version of the DSBR model of meiotic recombination that postulates the existence of independent pathways for the formation of CO and NCO recombinants (Allers and Lichten, 2001
Recombination between Polymorphic Heteroalleles Recombination between insertion and point mutations derived from different progenitor alleles yields almost exclusively CO Bz IGRs. Table 1 summarizes both published and new data obtained from 14 different heterozygotes between one of eight bz-E alleles derived from Bz-W22 and one of two bz-m mutations derived from Bz-McC. The eight bz-E mutations are either missense or nonsense mutations of Bz-W22 (Dooner and Martínez-Férez, 1997
The genotypes of all heterozygotes in Tables 1 through 4 are entered so that the proximal bz heteroallele (P) is on the top, the distal bz heteroallele (D) is on the bottom, the telomere end of 9S (sh) is to the left, and the centromere end (wx) is to the right. The four classes of Bz IGRs are represented schematically in the following order: NCO (PP), NCO (DD), CO (PD), and CO (DP), where left and right correspond to the telomeric and centromeric markers, respectively, and P and D refer to whether the marker was associated with the proximal or distal heteroallele in the heterozygous parent. As can be seen from Table 1, only one CO class was recovered, that expected from the location of the mutations in the bz gene. Furthermore, this class occurs in a >20-fold excess over the two NCO classes combined. Similar data have been obtained at the r (Dooner and Kermicle, 1986
The reciprocal CO class would have been expected to occur from either a triple crossover event (one at bz plus one in each flanking interval) or from conversion of the distal allele accompanied by exchange in the 25-centimorgan bz-wx interval. Double crossovers in the sh-bz-wx region are rare because of high chiasma interference in the region (Dooner, 1986 Because of their different origins, the heteroallelic pairs in Table 1 differ not only by the presence versus the absence of a large insertion but also by multiple SNPs across the gene (Figure 1). This also was the situation in the other maize intragenic recombination studies cited above, suggesting that the observations from Table 1 are not specific to the pairs of bz heteroalleles being examined. The great excess of CO IGRs seen frequently in maize, but not in yeast, could be attributable to the presence of a large transposon insertion in one of the alleles, the high density of SNPs between the alleles, or a combination of these two factors. To attempt to distinguish the contributions of these factors, recombination between highly polymorphic heteroalleles was examined in the absence of insertion heterozygosity.
Mutant derivatives of Bz-McC with lesions either at or close to the bz-m1 and bz-m2(D1) insertion sites, but lacking the insertions, were isolated as transposon excision products from different bz-m alleles. Ac excision in maize usually produces stable null alleles because of the target site duplication footprint that is left behind at the previous insertion site. Several stable alleles have been produced by the excision of Ac from bz-m2(Ac), the progenitor of the Ds insertion mutation bz-m2(D1) (Dooner and Belachew, 1989
A somewhat different strategy was adopted to generate a bz-s allele with a lesion close to the Ds insertion site in bz-m1. Because bz-m1 arose by transposition of Ds into Bz-McC (McClintock, 1951
These new alleles enabled the study of recombination between two noninsertion heteroalleles of different origin, a bz-E heteroallele from Bz-W22 and a bz-s heteroallele from Bz-McC. Results for the heteroallelic pairs bz-s30.1/bz-E6, bz-s30.1/bz-E8, bz-s2.1/bz-E6, and bz-s2.1/bz-E8 are presented in Table 2. It is clear from the data that removal of the large insertion does not affect the distribution of flanking markers among Bz IGRs. In fact, the CO/NCO ratio of the pooled data is essentially identical to that seen among Bz IGRs from heterozygotes in which one of the heteroalleles carried a large insertion (20.8 versus 20.4; A possible reservation to this conclusion is that neither bz-s heteroallele is strictly a point mutation; rather, they carry a transposon footprint that amounts to a very small insertion. Therefore, a true point mutation of Bz-McC was generated by EMS mutagenesis (see Methods and Figure 1) and paired with a point mutation from Bz-W22. The last entry in Table 2 shows the results obtained from the corresponding bz-EMc1/bz-E6 heterozygote. All of the Bz IGRs carry a CO arrangement of flanking markers, again that expected from the location of the mutations within the gene. These data reinforce the conclusion that the highly skewed recovery of COs seen among IGRs in maize is attributable to the high number of SNPs by which the two progenitor alleles differ.
Recombination between Dimorphic Heteroalleles
Table 3 summarizes both published and new data obtained from 11 different heteroallelic pairs of bz-E point mutations derived from Bz-W22. These heterozygotes are referred to as dimorphic because they differ at only two sites, those corresponding to the EMS mutations. For every heterozygote, the NCO class on the left carries the flanking markers of the proximal heteroallele and the NCO class on the right carries the flanking markers of the distal heteroallele. Although there is some variation from one heterozygote to another in the CO/NCO ratio and in the ratio of the two NCO classes, the variation does not follow any pattern and probably represents the random fluctuation typical of small numbers (Dooner, 1998
On the other hand, the cumulative data in Table 3 reveal clear trends. First, as in Tables 1 and 2, one CO class predominates among Bz IGRs (159:9), that expected from the location of the mutations in the gene. Second, the two NCO classes now occur in much larger numbers. In fact, the CO/NCO ratio, obtained by dividing the majority CO class by the sum of the three other classes, is slightly >1. The sharp difference in the recovery of the NCO class of IGRs in dimorphic versus polymorphic heterozygotes suggests that the large deficit of that class in the latter heterozygotes (Table 2) can be attributed to the multiple SNPs that distinguish one heteroallele from the other (
If one accepts that these classes represent gene conversions not accompanied by the exchange of flanking markers, then there is no indication in these data for preferential conversion of the proximal or distal allele. In yeast, gene conversion does not interfere with crossing over in an adjacent interval (Petes et al., 1991
An even greater proportion of NCOs (60 to 80%) was found previously among IGRs from pairwise combinations of Ds insertion heteroalleles, leading to the hypothesis that the Ds insertions might affect the outcome of recombination events (Dooner and Kermicle, 1986
To determine whether the presence of a Ds insertion in both homologs had any effect on the recovery of CO and NCO IGR types, one of the transposon insertions was replaced with a transposon excision footprint at the same site. In bz-s2.1 and bz-s2.2, an 8-bp excision footprint replaced the 3.3-kb Ds2(D1) and 3.8-kb Ds2(D2) insertions present in bz-m2(D1) and bz-m2(D2), respectively. The large body of data collected from the two bz-m/bz-s heterozygotes is summarized in Table 4. Once again, NCO IGRs predominate, and the sum of two NCO classes relative to the total is approximately the same as that in bz-m/bz-m heterozygotes (
Combined with the data in Tables 1 to 3, these data clearly show that the change in the predominant IGR type from CO to NCO reported previously at bz was not attributable to the presence of Ds insertions in one or both homologs but to a change from a polymorphic to a dimorphic heteroallelic situation. Nevertheless, a comparison of the data in Tables 3 and 4 reveals that insertions do have an effect in dimorphic heterozygotes (
Another point about the data in Table 4 that is worth noting relates to the differential recovery of the two parentally marked classes. In contrast to the situation with bz-E/bz-E heterozygotes (Table 3), the two NCO classes are not recovered equally in any of the heterozygotes listed in Table 4. The proximal NCO class is recovered preferentially in bz-m1/bz-m2(D1) and bz-m1/bz-m2(D2) heterozygotes (
This work represents an attempt to identify general rules that govern the outcome of intragenic recombination in maize, especially with respect to the issue of flanking marker distribution. To that end, recombination was analyzed in a variety of bz heterozygotes. The differences in the bz heteroalleles used in the recombination experiments ranged from just two nucleotides (dimorphic heteroalleles) to multiple sequence and structural polymorphisms (polymorphic heteroalleles). A systematic comparison of the effects of sequence divergence on the outcome of recombination led to the following conclusions: (1) Most recombination in polymorphic heterozygotes results in an exchange of flanking markers. This is true regardless of the heteroallelic combination studied: a large insertion and a point mutation (Table 1), an 8-bp excision footprint and a point mutation (Table 2), two point mutations (Table 2), or two large insertions (Dooner and Ralston, 1990 50% in heterozygotes between two point mutations (Table 3) to >90% in heterozygotes between two insertions (Table 4). (3) The two parentally marked classes (often inappropriately referred to as convertants [Pâques and Haber, 1999
The sharp differences in the outcomes of intragenic recombination experiments involving polymorphic and dimorphic heteroalleles can be explained in light of current versions of the original DSBR model of meiotic recombination in yeast that propose dual pathways for the formation of CO and NCO products (Gilbertson and Stahl, 1996
The Allers and Lichten (2001)
In this model, the decision to repair a double-strand break as a CO (via a DHJ) or a NCO (via SDSA) would occur at or soon after the initial step of strand invasion. The bz data presented here suggest that that decision is affected by the number of mismatches in the heteroduplex DNA formed by the invading strand. Polymorphic heteroalleles that differ, on average, in 1.5% of their bases yield almost exclusively CO IGRs, whereas dimorphic heteroalleles yield a mixture of CO and NCO IGRs. Observations on the effects of heterologies in yeast are consistent with these findings. Multiple heterologies (up to 1%) result in longer conversion tracts at meiosis (Schultes and Szostak, 1990
This effect could be mediated by proteins involved in DNA mismatch repair, which are known to affect recombination (for review, see Pâques and Haber, 1999
The almost exclusive occurrence of CO IGRs seen regularly in maize, but not in yeast, could be explained simply by the much higher degree of polymorphisms between the heteroalleles that have been used in maize recombination experiments. Although different yeast laboratories may work with different strains, experiments in any one laboratory tend to be with mutant lines isolated within the same strain (Pâques and Haber, 1999
Other observations in yeast and Escherichia coli have indicated a role for the mismatch repair system in controlling recombination. In E. coli, the mismatch repair proteins MutS and MutL, which are known to act as a barrier to interspecific recombination (Rayssiguier et al., 1989
The data in this report document two effects of insertions on the outcome of intragenic recombination. First, insertions appear to decrease the ratio of COs recovered in dimorphic heterozygotes (cf. Tables 3 and 4). This finding suggests that, in the absence of single base pair mismatches, insertions may promote strand displacement and, therefore, the NCO pathway. It is known that different MSH and mLH complexes interact with base/base mispairs and insertion/deletion mispairs (Nakagawa et al., 1999
The present data also bear on the potential suppressive effect of insertions on recombination. The overall frequency of Bz IGRs is approximately fourfold higher in bz-m/bz-s than in bz-m/bz-m heterozygotes (Table 4). This indicates that, in dimorphic heterozygotes, the large Ds insertion in the middle of the gene suppresses recombination when the other allele also carries an insertion. No comparable data are available at this time for the effect on recombination frequency of the 1.2-kb sDs insertion in bz-m1, which lies close to the 5' end of the bz gene (Figure 1). However, further removal of that insertion may not have much of an effect, because a previous comparison of recombination rates in bz-m/bz-m heterozygotes and dimorphic insertionless heterozygotes, such as those listed in Table 3, also revealed a fourfold difference between them (Dooner and Martínez-Férez, 1997 Polymorphic heterozygotes represent a completely different situation, because the effects of insertions are confounded by the effects of SNPs. Nevertheless, it is possible to use transposon excision derivatives to determine if removal of an insertion increases the frequency of IGRs, most of which are COs. The bz-m1/bz-E6 and bz-m1/bz-E8 heterozygotes listed in Table 1 can be compared with the bz-s30.1/bz-E6 and bz-s30.1/bz-E8 heterozygotes listed in Table 2 to examine the effect of the 1.2-kb sDs insertion on recombination. As will be recalled, bz-s30.1 carries an 8-bp addition footprint just 19 bp upstream of the site where sDs inserted in bz-m1. Similarly, the bz-m2(D1)/bz-E6 and bz-m2(D1)/bz-E8 heterozygotes listed in Table 1 and the bz-s2.1/bz-E6 and bz-s2.1/bz-E8 heterozygotes listed in Table 2 provide a test of the effect of the 3.3-kb Ds2(D1) insertion on recombination.
As can be seen from the data, the overall frequency of Bz IGRs did not increase after the removal of either insertion. The frequency of Bz IGRs is essentially identical in the two comparisons involving bz-E8. It is slightly higher in bz-s30.1/bz-E6 than in bz-m1/bz-E6 and lower in bz-s2.1/bz-E6 than in bz-m2(D1)/bz-E6, but none of the frequency differences is significant (Stevens, 1942
This comparison suggests that, in polymorphic heterozygotes in which only one allele carries an insertion, the insertion does not affect the frequency of recovery of IGRs (which are mostly COs). Therefore, most of the reduction in recombination detected in polymorphic heterozygotes relative to dimorphic heterozygotes (Dooner and Martínez-Férez, 1997
Description of bz Alleles All of the alleles used in this study were in the common genetic background of the inbred maize (Zea mays) line W22. The aleurone phenotypes conditioned by the various alleles in the presence of all of the complementary factors for anthocyanin pigmentation are given in parentheses. A graphic summary of the locations and natures of the mutations is presented in Figure 1. Bz-W22 (purple). This is the normal Bz allele carried in the W22 inbred line.
bz-E2 to bz-E9 (bronze). These are ethyl methanesulfonateinduced mutations from Bz-W22 (Dooner, 1986 Bz-McC (purple). This is the normal progenitor allele of the bz-m2(Ac) mutation. bz-EMc1 (bronze). This is an ethyl methanesulfonateinduced mutation from Bz-McC, generated by the same procedure used to obtain the bz-E1 to bz-E10 mutations from Bz-W22.
bz-m2(Ac) (purple spots on a bronze background). This is an allele arising from the insertion of the 4.6-kb Ac element at position 755-762 in the second exon of Bz-McC. The eight bases between 755 and 762 (TGGGGCAG) are duplicated on either side of Ac (McClintock, 1955
bz-s2.1 and bz-s2.2 (bronze). These are stable mutant derivatives of bz-m2(Ac) arising from independent excisions of Ac (Dooner and Belachew, 1989
bz-m2(D1) (bronze in the absence of Ac; spotted in its presence). This is derivative 1 from bz-m2(Ac), harboring a 3.3-kb internally deleted Ds element at the same position as Ac in bz-m2(Ac) (McClintock, 1955
bz-m2(D2) (bronze in the absence of Ac; spotted in its presence). This is derivative 2 from bz-m2(Ac), harboring a 3.7-kb internally deleted Ds element at the same position as Ac in bz-m2(Ac) (McClintock, 1955
bz-m1 (bronze in the absence of Ac; spotted in its presence). This allele arose from the insertion of a 1.2-kb sesquiDs (sDs) element at position 161-168 of Bz-McC (McClintock, 1951
bz-m30(Ac) (purple spots on a bronze background). This allele arises from the transposition of Ac from the tac2094 site in the mkk1 gene located 108 kb proximal to bz (Dooner and Belachew, 1989 bz-s30.1 (bronze). This is a stable mutant derivative of bz-m30(Ac) arising from the excision of Ac. The new mutation carries the frameshift 8-bp excision footprint TTCCTCTA/ATCCTCTG at the previous site of Ac insertion in bz-m30(Ac) as well as the 6-bp addition footprint CGGCGA at the original site of insertion of Ac in bz-m2(Ac).
bz-R (bronze). This is the bz reference allele, associated with a 340-bp deletion that extends from within the single intron to the second exon of bz and includes the Ac insertion site in bz-m2(Ac) (Rhoades, 1952
Markers
Selection and Analysis of Purple-Kernel Intragenic Recombinants
DNA Extraction and Sequencing
Accession Number
I thank Isabel M. Martínez-Férez and Caixin Zhan for the sequence of the bz-s excision footprints, Krystyna Dooner for assistance in processing the large seed populations screened in this work, Jerry Kermicle and Bill Eggleston for sharing unpublished data, and Matt Cowperthwaite and other laboratory members for comments on the manuscript. This research was supported by National Science Foundation Grant MCB 99-04646.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.001271. Received December 13, 2001; accepted February 11, 2002.
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