|
|
|
|
Vol. 12, Issue 10, 3191-3203, October 2001
Department of Molecular Microbiology and Biotechnology, Tel-Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel
Submitted May 3, 2001; Revised July 30, 2001; Accepted July 31, 2001| |
ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Telomeres, the natural ends of eukaryotic chromosomes, are essential for the protection of chromosomes from end-to-end fusions, recombination, and shortening. Here we explore their role in the process of meiotic division in the budding yeast, Kluyveromyces lactis. Telomerase RNA mutants that cause unusually long telomeres with deregulated structure led to severely defective meiosis. The severity of the meiotic phenotype of two mutants correlated with the degree of loss of binding of the telomere binding protein Rap1p. We show that telomere size and the extent of potential Rap1p binding to the entire telomere are irrelevant to the process of meiosis. Moreover, we demonstrate that extreme difference in telomere size between two homologous chromosomes is compatible with the normal function of telomeres during meiosis. In contrast, the structure of the most terminal telomeric repeats is critical for normal meiosis. Our results demonstrate that telomeres play a critical role during meiotic division and that their terminal cap structure is essential for this role.
| |
INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Telomeres are special DNA-protein structures at the natural ends
of all eukaryotic chromosomes that cap and protect chromosome ends from
fusions, recombination, and degradation. Telomeres are synthesized by
the specialized enzyme telomerase, which adds new telomeric repeats by
copying a short template sequence within its own RNA moiety (Greider
and Blackburn, 1989
; Shippen-Lentz and Blackburn, 1990
). Mutations in
the telomerase RNA template residues are incorporated into telomeres
(Yu et al., 1990
; McEachern and Blackburn, 1995
). Some
mutations in the telomeric sequence cause drastic changes in telomere
length and structure associated with many cellular phenotypes and in
some cases with cell death (Yu et al., 1990
; McEachern and
Blackburn, 1995
; Kirk et al., 1997
). These changes were
suggested to be caused by loss of binding of specialized proteins to
telomeric DNA length (McEachern and Blackburn, 1995
; Krauskopf and
Blackburn, 1996
).
Telomeres were shown to be involved in various cellular processes. Among these are chromosome maintenance, silencing of gene expression, signaling cellular senescence, and meiosis
Meiosis is a cell division process common to almost all eukaryotes.
Meiosis initiates with DNA synthesis followed by prophase I, during
which homologous chromosomes align side by side (homolog pairing) and
then form a structure termed the synaptonemal complex (reviewed
by Roeder, 1997
; Zickler and Kleckner, 1999
).
In recent years, evidence has accumulated suggesting the involvement of
telomeres in homolog pairing during meiosis. A distinguishing feature
of meiotic telomere behavior of many organisms has been a configuration
termed the bouquet arrangement in which the ends of most chromosomes
are attached to a small region of the nuclear envelope during early
prophase (reviewed by Dernberg et al., 1995
). Recently, the
bouquet arrangement has also been observed in yeast (Trelles-Sticken
et al., 1999
), suggesting that it is a highly conserved
meiotic feature. Light microscopic and fluorescence in situ
hybridization studies have established that the bouquet arrangement and
telomere clustering overlap temporally with zygotene, the stage of
prophase in which homolog pairing is first detected (Dernberg et
al., 1995
; Scherthan et al., 1996
; Trelles-Sticken et al., 1999
; Bass et al., 1997
, 2000
). These
studies, as well as studies in Schizosaccharomyces pombe
(Chikashige et al., 1997
), have also shown that telomeres
cluster de novo during meiotic prophase and have ruled out the
possibility of premeiotic clustering.
Studies of the striking telomere-mediated chromosome movement during
the early meiotic prophase in S. pombe revealed the
importance of telomere clustering for proper meiosis (Chikashige
et al., 1994
; Scherthan et al., 1994
; Chikashige
et al., 1997
).
In the past few years, the body of cytological evidence suggesting a
role for telomeres in meiosis has been supported by several genetic
studies. These studies, conducted in budding and fission yeast and in
mice, examined the meiotic phenotypes caused by mutations in
telomere-associated proteins and of cells harboring circular chromosomes. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a role for the
Tam1p/Ndj1p-telomere-associated protein in homolog pairing and the
stabilization of homology-dependent interactions was suggested (Chua
and Roeder, 1997
; Conrad et al., 1997
).
The S. pombe telomere binding protein Taz1p was also shown
to be essential for spore viability and the characteristic telomere clustering at the spindle pole body (SPB) (Cooper et al.,
1998
; Nimmo et al., 1998
). Proper telomere clustering thus
appears to be required to facilitate pairing and recombination.
A study of meiotic kinetics in S. cerevisiae has revealed
that in the absence of telomeres, the characteristic delay in meiotic prophase I indicative of pairing is lost (Rockmill and Roeder, 1998
).
Therefore, it was concluded that without telomeres, there was little or
none homolog pairing.
S. pombe cells in which all three chromosomes were circular
exhibited severe defects in meiosis, as evident from their greatly reduced spore viability (Naito et al., 1998
). This again
indicated a crucial role for telomeres in meiosis.
To directly study the effect of telomere structure on meiosis, we have
studied the meiotic phenotypes of telomeric mutants of the budding
yeast, Kluyveromyces lactis, in which the structure of
telomeres themselves is altered. In contrast to its relative budding
yeast, S. cerevisiae (Prescott and Blackburn 1997
),
mutations in the template region of the RNA subunit of telomerase of
K. lactis are precisely incorporated into new telomeric
repeats and result in predictable and homogeneous repeats. Depending on
the mutation, this results in alterations in telomere length and in the
structure of the telomeric complex (McEachern and Blackburn, 1995
).
Therefore, any effect on meiosis can be attributed to defined changes
in the telomeric structure and/or function, and direct evidence for the
role of telomeres in meiosis can be obtained. Here we have used
telomeric RNA (TER1) template mutations to study the role of
telomeres in meiosis. Our findings demonstrate that ter1
mutants with long and deregulated telomeres are severely defective in
meiosis. By comparing the meiotic phenotypes of two ter1
mutants, we show that general telomere size and the binding potential
for Rap1p throughout the entire length of the telomere are
insignificant for the process of meiosis. We also show that extreme
heterogeneity in telomere size of homologous chromosomes has no effect
on the normal function of telomeres during meiosis. In contrast, we
demonstrate that the structure of the most terminal telomeric repeats
is critical for normal meiosis.
| |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Plasmids
The following plasmids were a gift from M. McEachern (University
of Georgia, Athens, GA):
| pTER1-Acc: An integrative plasmid bearing a URA3 marker and an ~4-kb BamHI-Xbal fragment containing the TER1 gene with the Acc substitution in the template region. | |
| pTER1-Bsi: Same as pTER1-Acc but with the Bsi substitution in the template region. | |
| pTER1-Bcl: Same as pTER1-Acc but with the Bcl substitution in the template region |
Yeast Strains
All K. lactis strains used in this study are isogenic
to CBS2359 and homothallic.
| GG1929: ade2-202 ura3-59 TER1 | |||
| GG1935: ade1-201 ura3-59 TER1 | |||
| Acc-29: (GG1929 ter1-Acc). Constructed by integration of pTER1-Acc into GG1929 and selection of loop outs on 5-fluoroorotic acid (5-FOA). To screen for clones that retained ter1-Acc and lost TER1, we used primers outside the template region of TER1 to polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-amplify a 360-bp region containing the template. PCR products were separated on gel, blotted, and probed with a probe designed to react only with the ter1-Acc template sequence and not with the wild-type sequence. | |||
| Acc-35: (GG1935 ter1-Acc). Selected as described for Acc-29 | |||
|
|||
| TER1/ter1-Acc: Acc-29 crossed with GG1935 | |||
| Bsi-29: (GG1929 ter1-Bsi). Constructed by integration of pTER1-Bsi into GG1929 and screening for cells that retained ter1-Bsi upon plating on 5-FOA by PCR and hybridization to a Bsi-specific probe, as described for Acc-29 | |||
Bsi-35: GG1935 but ter1-Bsi, constructed as described for
Bsi-29
|
|||
| TER1/ter1-Bsi: Bsi-29 crossed with GG1935 | |||
| ter1-Bcl/ter1-Acc: Acc/Acc was transformed with pTER-Bcl resulting in a diploid stain with three copies of TER1: ter1-Acc-URA3-ter1-Bcl on one chromosome and ter1-Acc on the homologous chromosome, with capped telomeres. On selection on 5-FOA, cells that retained one copy of ter1-Acc and one copy of ter1-bcl were screened for by PCR and hybridization to a Bcl-specific probe, as described for Acc-29 | |||
| TER1/ter1-Bcl ex-Acc: spore product of ter1-Bcl/ter1-Acc, which retained ter1-Bcl (ter1-Bcl ex-Acc) was crossed to GG1929 or GG1935 |
Oligonucleotides Used as Primers and Probes
PCR Primers.
| TER1 936-952 5'-GCTATGACAACAATACC-3' | |
| TER1 1301-1287 5'-AATGGAGCAAGGACG-3' |
Telomeric Probes for Hybridization.
| Wild-type 5'-GGATTTGATTAGGTATGT-3' | |
| Acc specific 5'-GGTATGTGGTATACGGATTTGATTA-3' | |
| Bsi specific 5'-GGTATGTGGCGTACGGATTTGATTA-3' | |
| Bcl specific 5'-GGATTTGATCAGGTATGT-3' |
Telomere Length Analysis
Southern Blots.
Genomic DNA was prepared from
saturated cultures with the use of a modified version of the zymolase
method (Guthrie et al., 1991
). Pelleted cells were
resuspended in 150 µl of SEB plus lyticase (1 M sorbitol, 0.1 M EDTA,
14 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, 200 ng/ml lyticase) and incubated at 37°C
for 30 min at 100 rpm. After pelleting, cells were resuspended in 150 µl EDS (50 mM EDTA, 0.2% SDS) and incubated at 65°C for 15 min.
Tubes were placed on ice and 75 µl of 8 M
NH4OAc were added for 30-60-min incubation at
4°C. Tubes were centrifuged at 14 krpm for 10 min and supernatants
were precipitated with 135 µl of isopropanol. Genomic DNA was
digested with EcoRI and resolved in 0.8% agarose gels and
blotted onto Nylon membranes with the use of alkaline conditions.
Membranes were UV cross-linked with a Stratalinker 1800 (Stratagene, La
Jolla, CA). Hybridizations were carried out in
SDS-Na2PO4 according to the
procedure of Church and Gilbert (1984)
. Telomeric-specific probe was
made by phosphorylation with T4 polynucleotide kinase of the
oligonucleotide containing a G-strand K. lactis telomeric
repeat. Hybridizations (1 h) and washes (total 15 min) were performed
at appropriate temperature for each probe used.
Pulse-Field Gel Electrophoresis. Yeast genomic DNA (10 µl) was digested with restriction enzymes and subjected to gel electrophoresis in a CHEF-DRIII (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) device. Electrophoresis parameters were 0.6% agarose, 0.5× Tris borate/EDTA, 14°C at 2 V with pulse 200-1800 s. Gels were run for 72 h. Blotting and hybridization were performed as described above for Southern blots
Meiosis Protocols
K. lactis Mating.
Yeast cells (3 × 108/ml) of two strains were combined in a 4-µl
YPD drop on malt extract (2%) plate. After 48 h at 30°C cells were scraped off, resuspended in 50 µl of H2O,
and plated on selective plates (SD
Ade) at 30°C. As soon as
colonies became visible (2 d) the resulting diploid colonies were
transferred to YPD plates and incubated at 30°C for 2 d.
Sporulation. Cells were grown to ~108 cells/ml unless indicated differently, pelleted, washed twice in H2O, and resuspended with 2 ml of sporulation medium and incubated while rolling at 25°C for 4-5 d.
Tetrad Dissection. Cells from sporulation cultures were incubated for 10 min with 0.5 µl (2 U/1 µl) glucoronidase in H2O, 20 µl were spotted on a YPD plate, and tetrads were dissected with the use of a Singer micromanipulator. Spores were incubated at 30°C for 3 d for germination.
Kinetics of Meiosis. One milliliter of methanol was added to 0.5 ml of cells from sporulation culture. Cells were then washed in 1 ml of phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). After sonication (10 s), 1 µg/ml 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) was added, and cells were viewed in a fluorescent microscope. Experiments were performed at least two times and at each time point at least 200 cells were scored.
Fluorescence-Activated Cell Sorting (FACS) Analysis. One milliliter of 70% ethanol was added to 0.3 ml of cells from sporulation culture. Cell were then washed twice with 1 ml of PBS, resuspended in 0.5 ml of PBS + 1 mg/ml RNaseA and incubated overnight while rotating at 4°C. Twenty micrograms of proteinase K was added and samples were incubated at 55°C for 1 h. Cells were washed with 1 ml of PBS and resuspended in 0.5 ml (50 µg/ml) of propidium iodide for 1 h at room temperature and analyzed on a BD Biosciences FACSort (San Jose, CA). Ten thousand cells were analyzed at 580 nm for each histogram. MPLUS AV software (Phoenix Flow Systems, CA) was used to statistical analyses.
| |
RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Severe Telomeric Phenotype of Acc/Acc Mutants Leads to Severe Defects in Meiosis
We reasoned that if a role for telomeres in meiosis existed,
mutants whose telomeres are severely abnormal in length and/or structure would fail to undergo normal meiosis. We chose to study a
K. lactis strain harboring a telomerase RNA template
mutation termed ter1-Acc. This mutation consists of a G to A
substitution in the template sequence of TER1, the gene
coding for the RNA moiety of telomerase. This substitution is
incorporated faithfully into all newly synthesized telomeric repeats
(McEachern and Blackburn, 1995
). The abnormal repeats contain an
altered binding site for the protein Rap1p, reducing the in vitro
binding affinity for Rap1p by 300-fold relative to the wild-type site
(Krauskopf and Blackburn, 1996
). Because Rap1p is essential for
telomere length regulation, the ter1-Acc mutation leads to
immediate deregulation of telomere length and increased mean telomere
length in vivo (McEachern and Blackburn, 1995
; Krauskopf and Blackburn,
1996
). Three diploid strains were created: TER1/TER1,
TER1/ter1-Acc (TER1/Acc), and
ter1-Acc/ter1-Acc (Acc/Acc). First, their
telomeric phenotypes were confirmed. Total genomic DNA digested with
EcoRI was analyzed by a Southern blotting with the use of a
probe specific for wild-type telomeric repeats (which exist in the
internal part of the telomere in Acc/Acc mutants (McEachern
and Blackburn, 1995
). In the TER1/TER1 strain, a typical
telomeric pattern was obtained (Figure 1,
lanes 1 and 2). The pattern of bands is due to the different locations of the EcoRI recognition sites in the 12 subtelomeric
regions of the six K. lactis chromosomes. In contrast, and
as previously seen in ter1-Acc haploid strains, mean
telomere size was greatly elevated in the diploid Acc/Acc
strains compared with the characteristic wild-type telomere length.
Moreover, as previously seen in ter1-Acc haploid strains,
the telomeric signal appeared as a smear. This loss of the
characteristic pattern of bands is indicative of telomere length
deregulation because the cell population now harbors a variety of
telomere sizes (Figure 1, lanes 7 and 8). In the heterozygote TER1/Acc (Figure 1, lanes 3-6), where both
TER1 and ter1-Acc were present in a single cell,
distinct bands appeared in addition to a faint smear. This suggests,
that once a wild-type repeat is added onto a telomere end by TER1, this
telomere's chances to remain regulated are very high because it
becomes inaccessible to telomerase. Residual smearing observed in the
telomeric pattern of these strains may reflect occasional addition of
telomeric repeats by ter1-Acc in individual cells, followed
by incorporation of a wild-type repeat(s) by TER1.
|
To assess the mitotic phenotypes of the three strains a plating efficiency assay was performed. The efficiency of the Acc/Acc strain was 70% compared with that of the TER1/TER1 strain, whereas the plating efficiency of the heterozygote strain TER1/Acc was similar to that of the TER1/TER1 strain (our unpublished results).
To test the effect of the ter1-Acc mutation on meiosis, each
of the diploid strains was induced to sporulate, and sporulation rate
and spore viability were assessed. As seen in Table
1, sporulation rate was reduced by
>10-fold in the Acc/Acc strain (3%) compared with the
TER1/TER1 strain (43%). This reduction in the number of
meiotic products clearly indicated that the telomeric mutant cells were
greatly affected in one (or more) stages in meiosis. In contrast,
despite its semiregulated telomeric pattern, the heterozygote strain
TER1/Acc did not show any reduction in sporulation rate,
indicating that most TER1/Acc cells successfully completed all the crucial stages of meiosis.
|
In some cases, defects in meiosis result in the production of mature
tetrads whose spores are genetically aberrant (reviewed by Kupiec
et al., 1997
; Naito et al., 1998
). To test for
the presence of such aberrations, spore viability was assessed. To
measure spore viability, we counted the number of spores that
germinated and produced colonies upon tetrad dissection. Nonviability
of spores was defined as the inability to form visible colonies. As
seen in Table 1, spores originating from the Acc/Acc diploid were more than fourfold (22%) less viable than spores from the TER1/TER1 or TER1/Acc diploids (95 and 98%,
respectively). This failure to produce viable products indicates that
even in the rare event of full tetrad formation (3%), the meiotic
process in Acc/Acc diploids is fundamentally defective.
Spore nonviability could result from a physiological defect leading to
inability to germinate. Alternatively, it could result from a genetic
defect in the spore products themselves. In this case, spores would
germinate but not be able to form full-grown colonies. We observed that nearly all the spores scored as nonviable actually germinated and
divided to produce microcolonies of <10 cells (our unpublished results). This observation confirmed that the inviability of
Acc/Acc spore products was due to a genetic defect rather
than to a physiological defect in germination.
Kinetics of Meiosis in Acc/Acc Mutants
Our observations on the effects of the long and heterogeneous
telomeres in the Acc/Acc strain on sporulation rate and
spore viability confirmed that telomeres have an important role in
meiosis. To identify the stage of meiosis, in which Acc/Acc
are defective, we followed the meiotic process through its
different stages in TER1/TER1 and Acc/Acc
strains. We first tested whether the mutant was able to enter meiosis
and duplicate its DNA. Cultures were grown to saturation in rich medium
and transferred to liquid sporulation medium to induce sporulation.
Samples were taken from both cultures at consecutive time points, and
DNA content was analyzed by FACS. As seen in Figure
2A, in both strains approximately
two-thirds of the cells had gone through a cycle of DNA replication by
27 h after transfer to sporulation medium. Thus, the early meiotic event of DNA synthesis was not impaired in the Acc/Acc
strain. To test at which stage of meiosis Acc/Acc cells were
arrested, we compared the timing of appearance and the fractions of
TER1/TER1 and Acc/Acc cells with one, two, and
four nuclei, corresponding, respectively, to cells before the first
meiotic division, cells that were past the first but not the second
division, and cells that completed both divisions. Samples were drawn
at different time points after transfer to sporulation medium and were
fixed and stained with DAPI to enable visualization of nuclei. The
results of this experiment are presented graphically in Figure 2B.
Two-nuclear cells were most abundant between 15 and 30 h after
transfer to sporulation medium. During this time they averaged 7% in
TER1/TER1 and 3.5% in Acc/Acc. These values are
probably an underestimate, because the three-dimensional orientation of
two nuclei in a cell can cause their fluorescence signals to merge, and
the two are then counted as one. Four-nuclear cells started to appear
~17 h after transfer to sporulation medium, and reached their maximal concentration ~30 h after transfer to sporulation medium. In the TER1/TER1 strain they reached 60% of total cells, whereas
in Acc/Acc this value was reduced to 5%. From these results
we conclude that the majority of Acc/Acc cells duplicate
their DNA as do TER1/TER1 cells. However, in contrast to the
latter, most of the mutant cells do not proceed to divide and arrest
before MI. The minority of cells that do manage to continue beyond DNA
synthesis are not delayed in timing of meiosis.
|
Meiotic Phenotype of Milder Telomeric Mutation ter1-Bsi
The meiotic phenotypes of the Acc/Acc strain
clearly showed that long and deregulated telomeres, associated with
reduced Rap1p binding affinity, were inhibitory to the meiotic process.
This effect could be attributed to their increased size, the
heterogeneity of telomere length within each cell, or the lack of Rap1p
binding. To distinguish between these possibilities and further study
the relation between telomere structure and meiosis, we next examined the meiotic phenotype of a milder telomere mutant. The
ter1-Bsi mutation consists of a single template base
substitution adjacent to the ter1-Acc substitution. Like the
latter, the Bsi substitution falls within the Rap1p binding
site, and in vitro, binding affinity of Rap1p to the mutated site is
reduced 100-fold relative to the wild-type site and is three times
higher than its affinity to Acc (Krauskopf and Blackburn,
1996
). The characteristic phenotype of long and deregulated telomeres
is observed in ter1-Bsi cells but is less immediate than in
ter1-Acc, with telomeres reaching their maximal length and
heterogeneity after 50-100 cell divisions (McEachern and Blackburn,
1995
). To test the effect of the ter1-Bsi mutation on
meiosis, the diploid strains ter1-Bsi/ter1-Bsi
(Bsi/Bsi) and TER1/ter1-Bsi (TER1/Bsi)
were created and their telomere phenotypes were confirmed, as described
above for the Acc/Acc strains. As can be seen in Figure
3, lane 3, telomeres of the homozygote
strain Bsi/Bsi were deregulated, as expected. As was the
case with the TER1/Acc strain, the telomeres of the
heterozygote TER1/Bsi (Figure 3, lane 2) were semiregulated,
because distinct bands were visible, in addition to a smear. The
mitotic phenotypes of the three strains were assessed by a plating
efficiency assay. The efficiency of the Bsi/Bsi strain was
80% compared with that of the TER1/TER1 strain, whereas the
plating efficiency of the heterozygote strain, TER1/Bsi was
similar to that of the TER1/TER1 strain (our
unpublished results).
|
To study the effect of this mutation on meiosis, Bsi/Bsi
strains were induced to sporulate, and again, sporulation rate and spore viability were assessed. As seen in Table
2, the sporulation rate of the
Bsi/Bsi strain (10%) was significantly lower than for
TER1/TER1 cells (43%). Thus, Bsi/Bsi cells, like
Acc/Acc cells, are clearly impaired in their ability to
complete some stage(s) of meiosis. The heterozygote TER1/Bsi
had the same sporulation rate as TER1/TER1. Therefore, we
concluded that it was able to successfully complete all crucial stages
of meiosis. Although the sporulation rate of the Bsi/Bsi
strain was substantially reduced compared with wild type, spore
viability was less affected and reached 70% (Table 2). The better
viability of Bsi/Bsi spores indicated that in the 10% of
Bsi/Bsi cells that succeeded to complete meiosis, in most
cases, the meiotic mechanism itself was sufficiently intact to produce
viable meiotic products. This contrasts with the situation in
Acc/Acc, where, in most cases, the meiotic mechanism failed
to produce viable products even if meiosis reached the tetrad stage.
|
Higher Resolution Analysis of Telomere Sizes Reveals Similarity in Telomere Sizes of Acc/Acc and Bsi/Bsi
Having seen that the meiotic phenotypes of ter1 mutant strains correlated with the severity of their telomere phenotypes, we wanted to examine how this difference correlated with differences in several characteristics of telomeres in the two strains. We hypothesized that such a correlation would be indicative of the role of telomeres in meiosis.
The telomeric patterns of Acc/Acc and Bsi/Bsi
strains showed that in both strains telomere length is deregulated, and
mean length is greatly increased compared with wild type (Figures 1 and
3). One possible explanation for the difference between the severity of
meiotic defects in Bsi/Bsi relative to Acc/Acc
strains would be that the telomeres of the latter strain are in fact
longer but that this difference was not apparent due to the limitations of resolution of the gel system used. The limit mobility of DNA in
standard electrophoresis is only 15-20 kb. To better resolve long
telomeric DNA fragments, we used pulse-field electrophoresis of
EcoRI-digested genomic DNA in a CHEF apparatus to separate high-molecular weight fragments. Blotting and hybridization were performed as described for conventional telomere blots. As seen in
Figure 4, in the diploid mutant strains
Acc/Acc and Bsi/Bsi the mean telomere lengths
were very similar to each other in the high range: the bulk of
telomeric hybridizing fragments being on ~20- to ~50-kb fragments.
The faint smear seen above 50 kb in the Acc/Acc strain may
indicate that a very small fraction of telomeres in this strain was
>50 kb in length. Therefore, it is highly unlikely that differences in
telomere lengths per se accounted for the differences observed in the
meiotic phenotypes of Acc/Acc and Bsi/Bsi
strains.
|
Capping Suppresses Meiotic Defects in ter1 Mutants
As mentioned above, the in vitro binding affinity of Rap1p to Bsi
telomeric repeats was 3 times higher than to Acc repeats (Krauskopf and
Blackburn, 1996
). Because telomere length was indistinguishable between
diploid Bsi/Bsi and Acc/Acc strains, the observed
differences in the severity of meiotic phenotypes between the two
mutants might be accounted for by the difference in the number of Rap1p molecules associated with the entire telomere or with its most distal
end. It is possible that Rap1p molecules bound throughout the entire
telomere are important for a putative telomere meiotic function.
Alternatively, it is conceivable that only the Rap1p bound to the most
distal end of the telomere is important for such meiotic function. To
distinguish between these possibilities, we analyzed the meiotic
phenotypes of Bsi/Bsi or Acc/Acc strains whose
mutant telomeres were capped by incorporation of a very few telomeric
repeats capable of binding Rap1p onto the termini of their telomeres.
We reasoned that if the number of Rap1p molecules bound throughout the
telomere was important for meiosis then capping would not suppress the
meiotic defects in either mutant strain. In addition, the mutant
strains would still exhibit differences in the severity of their
meiotic phenotypes compared with each other. In contrast, if normal
binding of Rap1p to the most distal repeats of the telomere is both
necessary and sufficient for meiosis and uncapping of the telomeric
termini of ter1 telomeres was the sole reason for the
meiotic defects exhibited by ter1 strains then recapping
with normal repeats would suffice to override these meiotic defects.
Moreover, in this case we would expect that meiosis would be rescued to
a similar extent in both strains. We have previously reported that such
capping of long and deregulated telomeres was sufficient to restore
telomere length control. In these cases, telomere length, although
regulated, became set at new sizes, often much longer than the normal
length (Krauskopf and Blackburn, 1998
; Smith and Blackburn, 1999
).
Therefore, we compared the ability of strains with long telomeres,
capped or uncapped, to undergo meiosis. The ter1-Bcl
mutation, which introduces a Bcl1 restriction site into the
newly incorporated telomeric repeats, is located outside the Rap1p
binding site and was previously shown to have no effect on telomere
length or cell phenotype (Krauskopf and Blackburn, 1998
; Roy et
al., 1998
). Therefore, it can be used to cap telomeres with marked
but phenotypically silent telomeric repeats. Acc/Acc and
Bsi/Bsi cells were transformed with an integrative copy of
ter1-Bcl. Telomeric patterns were compared among the
original ter1 strains and those capped by
ter1-Bcl. As seen in Figure
5A, lanes 3-6, upon introduction of the
ter1-Bcl gene (Acc capped lanes), the telomeric patterns of
four independent clones immediately exhibited discrete bands indicative
of capping. This indicates that upon capping, the size of all telomeres
of all cells emanating from the original "capped" cell are stably
kept throughout hundreds of cell divisions. As previously seen, the
newly capped telomeres were kept at sizes significantly longer than the
wild-type telomeres (Figure 5A, lane 1) with mean length similar to
that of the original Acc/Acc (Figure 5A, lane 2). This
result showed that upon capping of deregulated telomeres in
Acc/Acc strains by Bcl repeats, telomere length
control was resumed, as expected. In contrast, the original Acc/Acc strain or a strain that lost the ter1 Bcl
gene after 5-FOA (Acc ex-capped), exhibited a smear characteristic of
deregulated telomeres (Figure 5A, lane 2 and lanes 7 and 8, respectively). To verify that capping required the addition of only a
few Bcl repeats, the same genomic DNA samples were double digested with EcoRI and Bcl1 (Figure 5A, lanes 9-16).
EcoRI cuts in subtelomeric locations internal to the
telomeric repeats (unique to each telomere), whereas Bcl1
specifically cleaves off the marked Bcl telomeric repeats added onto
the preexisting repeats of the telomeres. Therefore, the resulting
telomeric fragment pattern reflects the lengths of the remaining repeat
tracts located internally to the newly incorporated Bcl repeats.
Comparing the telomeric pattern of the double-digested DNA with that
resulting from restriction digest with EcoRI alone reflects
the extent of incorporation of Bcl1 repeats onto the ends of
the telomeres. As can be seen in Figure 5A, lanes 11-14, upon double
digestion with EcoRI and Bcl1, most of the
telomeric bands were only slightly shorter than those bands seen after
digestion with EcoRI alone (lanes 3-6). Some shorter fragments are also generated by cutting at Bcl1 sites in
certain subtelomeric locations. Hence, in most telomeres, only a very few Bcl repeats had been incorporated onto the chromosomal
termini. To confirm that all Bcl repeats were indeed cleaved
by Bcl1, the same blot was stripped and reprobed with a
Bcl-specific probe under stringent conditions (Figure 5B). As seen in
Figure 5B, lanes 11-14, after cleavage with Bcl1 the
telomeric fragments no longer hybridized with the Bcl-specific probe,
whereas the telomeric fragments, which resulted from digestion with
EcoRI alone (lanes 3-6), still hybridized. This confirmed
that cleavage with Bcl1 was complete. Capping was confirmed
by the same manner for the capped Bsi/Bsi strains (our
unpublished results).
|
To test the effect of capping on meiosis, the strains original
Acc/Acc, Bcl/Acc capped, and Acc/Acc
ex-capped, which retained two copies of ter1-Acc after
selection on 5-FOA, as well as original Bsi/Bsi,
Bcl/Bsi capped, Bsi/Bsi ex-capped, and
TER1/TER1 were induced to sporulate. As seen in Table
3, sporulation rates before capping were
5% in the original Acc/Acc strain, 1% in the ex-capped Acc/Acc strain, 4.5% in the original Bsi/Bsi
strain, and 2.5% in the ex-capped Bsi/Bsi strain. In
contrast, average sporulation rates of the capped strains were 49%
(for Bcl/Acc capped) and 47% (for Bcl/Bsi
capped), similar to their rate in the wild-type strain
(TER1/TER1). The effect of capping on spore viability was also analyzed. Table 3 shows that although spore viability in the
original Acc/Acc strain was only 16% in this experiment,
the average viability of the capped Acc/Acc strains was
90%. Likewise, although spore viability in the original
Bsi/Bsi strain was 61%, the average viability of the capped
strains was 93%. In all cases, viabilities of the capped strains were
similar to each other and resembled that of the wild-type
TER1/TER1 strain.
|
In summary, capping of ter1 mutant telomeres, Bsi/Bsi or Acc/Acc, with a few normally-Rap1p binding repeats was sufficient to completely suppress the meiotic phenotypes of these strains. This was despite the fact that telomeric sizes were still abnormal, and most of the telomeric repeats in the capped strains were still mutant and hence only able to bind Rap1p with greatly reduced affinity.
Telomere Length Heterogeneity between Homologous Chromosomes Is Compatible with Normal Meiosis
Incorporation of Bcl repeats competent to bind Rap1p onto the most
distal portion of the telomere caused the disappearance of the
heterogeneity in telomere length characteristic of uncapped telomeres.
This Bcl capping was thus evidenced by the substantial narrowing of
telomere size range and disappearance of the smear observed in the
original uncapped strains. This resulting pattern of discrete bands
indicates that upon capping, the telomeres of a given cell are
"captured" at the sizes they had at the moment of capping and that
this structure is subsequently passed on to its progeny. This results
in a uniform clonal cell population with respect to telomere sizes. In
contrast, before capping, telomere length heterogeneity reflects a
situation in which the telomeres within a cell can vary greatly in
size, including telomeres of homologous chromosomes. Therefore, we
tested two possibilities that could explain how capping rescues meiosis
in ter1-capped strains. The first was that it is the binding
of Rap1p to the most distal repeat(s) alone that is crucial for
meiosis. The second was that it is the narrowing of telomere size range
within the same cell, specifically that of homologous chromosomes, that
is crucial for meiosis. To distinguish between these two possibilities, we directly tested the effect of telomere length heterogeneity on
meiosis. We created diploid strains that were genotypically wild type
but contained two distinct sets of chromosomes: one with long telomeres
(capped and therefore regulated) and the other with wild-type-sized
telomeres. These strains were created by sporulating the capped diploid
strains, either Acc/Bcl-capped or Bsi/Bcl-capped.
Spore clones that retained the ter1-Bcl allele had long but regulated
telomeres (capped) and were genotypically wild type because the
Bcl mutation is silent. Figure
6A shows representative telomeric
patterns of spore clones of capped Acc strains (Figure 6A, lanes 3-5,
TER ex-Acc) and capped Bsi strains (Figure 6B, lanes 3 and 4). These
strains were mated with a "naïve" TER1 strain
with normal-sized telomeres. As can be seen in Figure 6A, lanes
6-11(TER ex-Acc × TER), and Figure 6B, lanes 5-8 (TER ex-Bsi × TER), in the resulting diploids, all the "input"
telomeres remained unchanged in size or structure. This resulted in two sets of chromosomes in the same cell: one with short telomeric restriction fragments ranging from 1 to 5 kb (contributed by the TER1 parent) and one with long telomeric restriction
fragments ranging from 5 to >20 kb (apparently contributed by the
capped ter1-Acc or ter1-Bsi parent,
respectively). This contrasts with the situation in the corresponding
heterozygous TER1/ter1-Acc or TER1/Bsi strains,
which have intermediate telomere sizes and structure, as seen in
Figures 1 and 3. Telomere sizes remained stable through 10 restreaks
(~250 cell divisions; our unpublished results).
|
The ability of these strains to go through meiosis was tested in two
independent crosses of each strain. Sporulation efficiency and spore
viability were scored and compared with the original ter1
strains. As seen in Table 4, despite the
fact that telomeres of the two sets of chromosomes remained very
different in size, average sporulation efficiency (59% in
TER1/ter1-Bcl ex Acc and 50% in TER1/ter1-Bcl ex
Bsi) and spore viability (98% in TER1/ter1-Bcl ex Acc
and 98.5% in TER1/ter1-Bcl ex Bsi) were significantly
improved relative to their values in the original ter1
strains, reaching values comparable with those observed in
TER1/TER1 strains. We conclude that telomere size
heterogeneity is compatible with normal meiosis and cannot account for
the meiotic defects observed in ter1 mutants.
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Many aspects of telomere function and metabolism are still largely unknown. The rapid advances in telomere research during recent years have repeatedly demonstrated that telomeres perform complex, and sometimes unexpected, cellular functions. One of these functions may be their involvement in the meiotic process. The bouquet structure conserved among many organisms has led researchers to hypothesize that the ends of homologous chromosomes have an active role in spatially facilitating their pairing. More recently, this hypothesis was strengthened by genetic studies performed in mutants of telomere-associated proteins.
We set out to address the question of the role of telomeres in meiosis by investigating the meiotic behavior of telomeres with defined alterations in telomere size and structure. The experimental system used, the budding yeast, K. lactis, a close relative of the widely studied S. cerevisiae, combines the advantages of yeast as a well-characterized genetic system for the study of meiosis with considerable specific advantages for telomere study and manipulation.
Timing of Telomeric Involvement in Meiosis
The two ter1 mutations we analyzed unambiguously caused a defective meiotic phenotype, thus providing direct evidence for a meiotic role for telomeres. First, the kinetics of progress of Acc/Acc cells through the meiotic process showed that Acc/Acc cells when induced to sporulate, like wild-type cells, initiate meiosis by going through one round of DNA replication. However, most Acc/Acc cells fail to proceed further to complete meiotic division I as indicated by the fact that they remain with one nucleus. The minority of cells that do proceed beyond this stage continue through the two divisions to the completion of meiosis II with the same kinetics as wild-type cells. However, only 22% of their progeny are viable.
Telomeres may play an active role in meiosis such as ensuring proper segregation of chromosomes. In this case, it is possible that Acc/Acc cells that proceed beyond DNA synthesis encounter a catastrophe due to their inability to carry out this role properly. According to this "active" model, escapers, which somehow manage to proceed beyond meiosis I, are expected to give rise to aberrant products. Alternatively, telomeres might be envisioned to play a passive role in meiosis, such as being monitored by a meiotic checkpoint apparatus. In this case, after DNA replication, telomeres with Acc repeats may be perceived as abnormal and elicit a checkpoint signal to arrest progression beyond this stage. According to this "passive" model, escapers, which somehow evade the checkpoint surveillance system, are expected to give rise to normally viable products. Therefore, the fact that the few Acc/Acc cells that did manage to complete meiosis and produce tetrads gave rise to inviable spores, supports the active model. However, we cannot exclude the possibility that telomeres play a dual role, that of being monitored by a checkpoint apparatus and later on a more active role.
Telomeric Element Essential to Meiosis
What properties of ter1 telomeres can make them incapable of fulfilling their normal meiotic role, according to a model of active involvement? Telomeres of ter1 cells are abnormal in at least three respects: mean length, size uniformity, and Rap1p binding potential.
Excessive Telomere Length. Conceivably, excessive telomere length could mechanically hinder a function such as physical facilitation of homologous chromosome alignment. For example, a cluster of abnormally long telomeres may not be able to support chromosomal movements properly. This model is not supported by our results: ter1-Bsi telomeres are as long as ter1-Acc telomeres, yet the meiotic phenotype of ter1-Bsi is much less severe. Moreover, upon capping of Acc/Acc or Bsi/Bsi, telomeres remain very long, whereas their meiotic defect is completely suppressed.
Heterogeneity of Telomere Lengths. Wild-type K. lactis telomeres, as is the case in most organisms, are more or less uniform in length in a single cell. Theoretically, this uniformity may be necessary to carry out an active role in meiosis. For example, telomere-mediated chromosome alignment could be impaired if telomeres of homologous chromosomes were not the same length. To assess the effect of heterogeneity between two individual telomeres of homologs in the same cell, we constructed diploid strains containing one haploid set of chromosomes with normal-sized telomeres, and the other haploid set with very long telomeres. The fact that sporulation efficiency and spore viability were completely normal in these strains excludes the possibility that telomere size heterogeneity between clonal homologs per se impairs the meiotic function of telomeres.
Decreased Rap1p Binding Potential of the Entire Telomere.
Rap1p itself may be the active mediator of telomeric involvement in
meiosis. For example, it may interact with other proteins to initiate
and maintain the bouquet formation. Taz1p and the recently reported
S. pombe homolog of Rap1p are both required for proper
meiosis and specifically for the bouquet-reminiscent "horsetail"
movement (Cooper et al., 1998
; Hiraoka, 1998
; Nimmo et al., 1998
). It was not shown, however, whether the
factor directly active in S. pombe meiosis was the
protein itself, or the telomeric structure that depends upon its
regulatory activity.
Loss of Capping at Telomeres. A putative active role of telomeres may require their "cap" structure to be intact. Here we refer to capping in its most general form: a functional structure at the very end of the telomere. We have previously shown that telomere length regulation is particularly dependent on the most distal double-stranded repeats of the telomere. In view of their special importance for telomere functions in mitotic cells, the most distal telomeric repeats may also be important for carrying out a putative meiotic role. In ter1 mutants the distal repeats are altered and the degree of the loss of Rap1p binding to the mutated repeats correlated with the severity of the meiotic phenotype of these mutants. Therefore, we speculated that this might underlie their meiotic phenotypes. The capping experiments referred to above show unambiguously that it is the impairment of this terminal cap structure that is responsible for the severe meiotic defects exhibited by ter1 mutants. The fact that meiosis was not impaired in the heterozygote strains whose telomeres were capped further stresses the importance of the terminal cap for meiosis.
Although the mutations tested were single base substitutions within the Rap1p binding domain, the possibility that it is the impairment in binding of a telomere binding factor other than Rap1p that accounted for the observed meiotic defects in ter1 mutants, cannot be ruled out.Role of Telomeric Cap Structure in Meiosis
What is the role of the cap structure in meiosis? As mentioned above, normal telomeres are required for passage through the first meiotic division and for viable spore production. Because capping of mutant telomeres suppresses both phenotypes, we conclude that it is the very distal repeats that carry out those two putative functions, although not necessarily through the same mechanism.
Recently, it was shown that in the absence of the telomeric-associated
meiosis-specific protein Ndj1p, telomeres are scattered throughout the
nucleus and fail to form the perinuclear meiosis-specific distribution
pattern characteristic of this stage. Because Rap1p and Ndj1p show
extensive colocalization in pachytene nuclei (Chua and Roeder 1997
.),
it is possible that Ndj1p may function together with Rap1p to tether
meiotic telomeres to the nuclear periphery (Trelles-Sticken et
al., 2000
).
Evidence from S. pombe showed that the pairing of homologous
chromosomes is impaired in several mutants that are defective in
telomere clustering at the SPB. A mutant defective in kms1, a component
of the SPB that functions specifically in meiosis, failed to form a
telomere cluster due to the disintegration of the SPB structure, and
exhibited a reduced rate of meiotic recombination (Shimanuki et
al., 1997
). As mentioned above, in mutants of the telomere binding
protein taz1, telomeres fail to cluster at the SPB during meiotic
prophase, causing severe meiotic phenotype. Recently, it has been shown
that telomeres of rodent spermatocytes are associated with the same
telomere binding proteins that are associated with them in somatic
cells (mouse Trf1, rat TRF2, and Rap1 at meiotic telomeres of both
rodents) (Scherthan et al., 2000
)
Taken together, it is possible that in yeast, a telomere binding protein, most likely Rap1p, which is bound to the very end of the telomere, is able to anchor chromosomes by interacting with a meiosis-specific telomere binding protein(s), perhaps Ndj1p or other associated proteins. This anchorage may be essential to facilitate telomere localization and the unique chromosomal movements observed during meiosis.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank E.H. Blackburn and M. Kupiec for critical reading of the manuscript. This work was supported by The Israel Science Foundation (grant 42/98-1) to A.K.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* These authors contributed equally to this work.
Corresponding author. E-mail address:
kraus{at}post.tau.ac.il.
| |
REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
D. H. Underwood, C. Carroll, and M. J. McEachern Genetic Dissection of the Kluyveromyces lactis Telomere and Evidence for Telomere Capping Defects in TER1 Mutants with Long Telomeres Eukaryot. Cell, April 1, 2004; 3(2): 369 - 384. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. Smolikov, Y. Mazor, and A. Krauskopf ELG1, a regulator of genome stability, has a role in telomere length regulation and in silencing PNAS, February 10, 2004; 101(6): 1656 - 1661. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
B. Liebe, M. Alsheimer, C. Hoog, R. Benavente, and H. Scherthan Telomere Attachment, Meiotic Chromosome Condensation, Pairing, and Bouquet Stage Duration Are Modified in Spermatocytes Lacking Axial Elements Mol. Biol. Cell, February 1, 2004; 15(2): 827 - 837. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. Smolikov and A. Krauskopf The Rap1p-Telomere Complex Does Not Determine the Replicative Capacity of Telomerase-Deficient Yeast Mol. Cell. Biol., December 1, 2003; 23(23): 8729 - 8739. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||