Multiple Pairwise Analysis of Non-homologous Centromere Coupling Reveals Preferential Chromosome Size-Dependent Interactions and a Role for Bouquet Formation in Establishing the Interaction Pattern

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Abstract

During meiosis, chromosomes undergo a homology search in order to locate their homolog to form stable pairs and exchange genetic material. Early in prophase, chromosomes associate in mostly non-homologous pairs, tethered only at their centromeres. This phenomenon, conserved through higher eukaryotes, is termed centromere coupling in budding yeast. Both initiation of recombination and the presence of homologs are dispensable for centromere coupling (occurring in spo11 mutants and haploids induced to undergo meiosis) but the presence of the synaptonemal complex (SC) protein Zip1 is required. The nature and mechanism of coupling have yet to be elucidated. Here we present the first pairwise analysis of centromere coupling in an effort to uncover underlying rules that may exist within these non-homologous interactions. We designed a novel chromosome conformation capture (3C)-based assay to detect all possible interactions between non-homologous yeast centromeres during early meiosis. Using this variant of 3C-qPCR, we found a size-dependent interaction pattern, in which chromosomes assort preferentially with chromosomes of similar sizes, in haploid and diploid spo11 cells, but not in a coupling-defective mutant (spo11 zip1 haploid and diploid yeast). This pattern is also observed in wild-type diploids early in meiosis but disappears as meiosis progresses and homologous chromosomes pair. We found no evidence to support the notion that ancestral centromere homology plays a role in pattern establishment in S. cerevisiae post-genome duplication. Moreover, we found a role for the meiotic bouquet in establishing the size dependence of centromere coupling, as abolishing bouquet (using the bouquet-defective spo11 ndj1 mutant) reduces it. Coupling in spo11 ndj1 rather follows telomere clustering preferences. We propose that a chromosome size preference for centromere coupling helps establish efficient homolog recognition.

Figures

  • Fig 1. 3C2D-qPCR design for characterizing centromere coupling. (A) Design of two primers (arrow) and one Taqman probe (ball-andstick) to quantify the interaction between restriction fragments ligated together, each encompassing a non-homologous centromere (oval). (B) Distribution of restriction enzyme sites on fragments encompassing the centromere (CEN) on all 16 chromosomes using an EcoRI single digestion (3C) (left) or an EcoRI-MfeI double digestion (3C2D) (right). For each chromosome (on y-axis), the distances of the restriction sites delimitating the CEN fragment are given in kilobases (kb), in relation to the center of the CEN (x-axis). Blue vertical lines indicate EcoRI sites and red lines indicate MfeI sites.
  • Fig 4. Cytological demonstration of differential coupling from 3C2D-qPCR data. (A) Representations of two spread nuclei (from spo11 haploid strains) in the coupling phase of meiosis. Left: centromeres 3 and 5 are separated (not coupled). Right: centromeres 1 and 3 are coupled. Upper: Red focus is centromere 5 or 1, green focus is centromere 3, and blue foci indicate kinetochores (Ctf19). Lower panels, same as above, but blue marks DNA (DAPI). (B) spo11 haploids containing two centromeres marked with GFP-CEN3 and either mCherry-CEN1 (BR5890) or mCherry-CEN5 (BR5891) were scored for centromere coupling (overlap of red and green signals) in three independent experiments (see Methods for details). The percentage of spreads with coupled CENs is given

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Lefrançois, P., Rockmill, B., Xie, P., Roeder, G. S., & Snyder, M. (2016). Multiple Pairwise Analysis of Non-homologous Centromere Coupling Reveals Preferential Chromosome Size-Dependent Interactions and a Role for Bouquet Formation in Establishing the Interaction Pattern. PLoS Genetics, 12(10). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006347

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