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Random Chromosome Segregation without Meiotic Arrest in Both Male and Female Meiocytes of a dmc1 Mutant of ArabidopsisFlorence Couteaua, François Belzileb, Christine Horlowc, Olivier Grandjeanc, Daniel Vezonc, and Marie-Pascale Doutriauxaa Institut de Biotechnologie des Plantes, Bâtiment 630, Université Paris-Sud, 91405 Orsay, France b Département de Phytologie, 1243 Pavillon Marchand, Université Laval, Québec, Canada G1K 7P4 c Institut National de le Recherche Agronomique, Station de Génétique et Amélioration des Plantes, Route de St Cyr, 78026 Versailles, France Correspondence to: Florence Couteau, florence.couteau{at}ibp.u-psud.fr (E-mail), 33-1-69-33-64-23 (fax)
In yeast, the DMC1 gene is required for interhomolog recombination, which is an essential step for bivalent formation and the correct partition of chromosomes during meiosis I. By using a reverse genetics approach, we were able to identify a T-DNA insertion in AtDMC1, the Arabidopsis homolog of DMC1. Homozygotes for the AtDMC1 insertion failed to express AtDMC1, and their residual fertility was 1.5% that of the wild type. Complete fertility was restored in mutant plants when a wild-type copy of the AtDMC1 gene was reintroduced. Cytogenetical analysis points to a correlation of the sterility phenotype with severely disturbed chromosome behavior during both male and female meiosis. In this study, our data demonstrate that AtDMC1 function is crucial for meiosis in Arabidopsis. However, meiosis can be completed in the Arabidopsis dmc1 mutant, which is not the case for mouse or some yeast mutants.
Meiosis allows diploids to undergo sexual reproduction and leads to the genetic reassortment of characters. Meiosis differs from mitosis in that a single round of DNA replication precedes two sequential cell divisions so that an initially diploid cell generates four haploid cells. Homologous chromosomes segregate from one another during the first (reductional) division, and sister chromatids separate during the second (equational) division. Association of pairs of homologous chromosomes to form bivalents is a prerequisite to their accurate partitioning during the first division of meiosis. Bivalent formation relies on homologous recombination and synaptonemal complex polymerization, which physically bind the homologs via the establishment of crossovers and synapsis (
In budding yeast, meiotic recombination is initiated by DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) created by Spo11, a type II topoisomerase, at specific locations along the chromosomes. This early recombination step additionally requires that the Rad50, Mre11, Mre2, Rec102, Rec103, Rec104, and Rec114 functions be present. The DSBs are processed further by resection of their 5' ends to yield long 3' single-stranded tails, which can invade a homologous duplex (
Eukaryotic homologs of the RAD51 and DMC1 genes have been found in a number of organisms ( In this study, we characterize an Arabidopsis dmc1 mutant. This mutant was recovered from a collection of T-DNA insertional lines by using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)based screening procedure. Homozygotes for the dmc1 insertional mutation showed reduced fertility in self-crosses and outcrosses. Sporogenesis was affected in both male and female organs, and abnormal meiosis was observed in pollen mother cells and in megaspore mother cells as well. Our results support the view that features essential to meiosis in yeast are conserved in plants. However, the dmc1 mutation in Arabidopsis does not lead to meiotic arrest, as has been observed in mouse and in some yeast mutants, a point that we discuss.
Isolation and Molecular Characterization of a dmc1 Insertional Mutation
Plants with a dmc1-/- genotype show reduced fertility. This phenotype exhibits a 3:1 segregation ratio (fertility/reduced fertility) in progeny of self-fertilized heterozygous dmc1+/- plants, indicating that the mutation is recessive and monogenic. Sequencing revealed the insertion to disrupt the AG consensus splice site between intron 8 and exon 9 (Figure 1A). Downstream, the right border of the T-DNA is missing, as was previously suggested by the kanamycin segregation data. A short deletion of exon 9 of AtDMC1 (<20 bp) accompanied the inserted T-DNA, as ascertained by PCR with different primers along exon 9 (data not shown). The insertion causes a disruption of the AtDmc1 protein in a well-conserved threeamino acid motifQLPthat is found in the RecA domains of all Rad51 and Dmc1 homologs. RNA gel blot analysis (Figure 1C) shows that a full-length AtDMC1 transcript is absent from young flower buds of the mutant and that this transcript is less abundant in heterozygous than in wild-type plants. However, a shorter RNA that weakly hybridizes with the AtDMC1 probe may represent a transcript that initiated in the 5' region of the gene, upstream of the insertion, and which probably terminates in the T-DNA. Both the short and the full-length transcripts are present in flower buds from heterozygous plants. AtRAD51 expression, also known to be induced in young flower buds, increased in both homozygous and heterozygous dmc1 plants when compared with the wild type (confirmed by reverse transcriptionPCR; data not shown).
dmc1-/- Plants Show Reduced Fertility
Complementation of the dmc1 Insertional Mutation Among 80 gentamycin-resistant T2 plants, none was found to display the reduced fertility phenotype of the dmc1 mutant. When 55 of these gentamycin-resistant T2 plants were tested by using PCR, they all proved to carry a wild-type AtDMC1 allele; we were not able to differentiate the transgenic Columbia allele from the resident Wassilewskija allele. Although fertile, 41 of these plants also allowed PCR amplification with primers specific for the disrupted dmc1 allele. In the absence of complementation, such association of the wild-type phenotype with the disrupted allele would be observed only at a frequency below 10-7 ([2/3]41). After using PCR to characterize 10 independent T3 progeny, we ascertained that some of the T2 fertile plants that carried a mutant dmc1 allele were homozygous for the dmc1 insertion (that is, the mutant allele was present in all of the T3 plants derived from two out of four single T2 plants tested).
Meiosis Is Disturbed in the dmc1-/- Mutant Plants
The Arabidopsis genome consists of five pairs of chromosomes (2n = 10), which become associated into five bivalents at metaphase I. Both male and female metaphase I or early anaphase I chromosomes can be seen in wild-type pollen mother cells and megaspore mother cells as five fully condensed cooriented bivalents (Figure 4A and Figure 5A). After metaphase I, anaphase I proceeds, with the bivalents segregating into two groups of five chromosomes (two haploid genomes), which migrate to opposite poles. Metaphase II ensues, which shows two groups of five condensed univalents. This pattern was clearly observed in wild-type pollen mother cells and megaspore mother cells and is shown in Figure 4B and Figure 5B.
In dmc1 pollen mother cells and megaspore mother cells at metaphase I, the chromosomes generally appear as 10 independent but fully condensed univalents scattered throughout the cytoplasm (Figure 4D and Figure 5C to 5F). We did not detect proper metaphase II in dmc1 meiocytes. Instead, the univalents eventually partitioned randomly (Figure 4E to 4G and Figure 5G to 5I). The maximum number of independent chromosomal structures that we could observe was always 10 (sometimes fewer when some chromosomes seemed to have associated into bivalents). Such variants never were observed in wild-type cells. This aberrant chromosomal behavior made it difficult to precisely define the stages of meiosis I in dmc1 meiocytes. Meiotic cells were interpreted as being in pseudometaphase I if the univalents seemed to have aggregated or to be evenly spread throughout the cell. They were classified as being in pseudometaphase II if the 10 univalents had segregated into subgroups. Sometimes one or more univalents seemed to lag in the middle, whereas others migrated to opposite poles of the cell, which can result in up to three discernible groups of univalents. These so-called laggards have been observed in other meiotic Arabidopsis mutants (e.g., syn1,
After metaphase II, in wild-type meiocytes, the univalents undergo sister chromatid separation and initiate a new poleward movement (anaphase II). At this time, chromosomes reorganize into four groups of five chromosomes and start to decondense during diakinesis, while four independent cells reconstitute. In pollen mother cells, the second division is perpendicular to the first, thus resulting in four meiotic products set at the four poles of the cell that will turn into a tetrad (see Figure 4C; In dmc1 male and female meiocytes, meiosis II proceeds after the irregular meiosis I. In dmc1 pollen mother cells, during the early cytokinesis stage (at which organelles are distributed throughout the cytoplasm), it is clear that tetrad organization is characterized by the unequal partitioning of chromosomes to each pole and by the appearance of more than four groups of chromosomes in some instances (see Figure 4H). An early anaphase II configuration in a dmc1 megaspore mother cell, for which a stereopicture could be drawn (data not shown), is shown in Figure 5J (detail in Figure 5K). In this megaspore mother cell, the chromosomes seem to be organized into three groups: in one group (bottom right), three univalents already are positioned at one pole and show no sign of sister chromatid separation; in a second group (upper left), two chromosomes undergoing sister chromatid separation are set at the opposite pole; and finally, in the third group (center), five aligned chromosomes can be observed at the cell's equator with their separating sister chromatids orientating to the previously defined opposite poles. At this point, it cannot be established whether such univalents will effectively disjoin or move undivided toward the same pole or whether they will fail to migrate. In this example, it is also interesting that two distinct planes of meiosis II division can be defined (Figure 5K, upper left and center), although one group of chromosomes (bottom right) is excluded from this operation.
Gametophytic Development in dmc1-/- Plants
In dmc1 anthers, tetrads contain variable numbers of heterogeneously sized microspores (Figure 6B) instead of the usual four (Figure 6A). Although young anthers from dmc1 plants contain as many microspores as do wild-type anthers (Figure 6C and Figure 6D), pollen release is largely reduced in dmc1 plants (see Figure 2B and Figure 2C). In the majority of ovules from dmc1 plants, gametogenesis does not result in a normal eight-nuclear embryo sac (Figure 6E). Most of the megaspore mother cells of the mutant arrest just after meiosis, with only degenerated cells being visible (Figure 6F); in a few cells, partial differentiation of the embryo sac takes place (in these megaspore mother cells, two nuclei are visible; data not shown). However, there are some ovules in which a functional embryo sac is present because fertility is not totally abolished in dmc1 mutant plants. During the early stages of megagametogenesis, integument growth around the female gametophyte is normal in mutant plants, allowing for the precise staging of the ovules (Figure 6E and Figure 6F).
Fertilization Events in dmc1-/- Plants
The Arabidopsis dmc1 mutant is a novel meiotic mutant that was isolated by using reverse genetics. That the same meiotic defect affects both male and female sporogenesis in dmc1 plants supports the hypothesis that DMC1 possesses a central and fundamental function in plant meiosis, as was previously shown for the yeast (
Meiosis is profoundly disturbed in Arabidopsis dmc1 meiocytes. Ten univalents were regularly found in mutant pollen mother cells and megaspore mother cells undergoing meiosis instead of the expected five metaphase I bivalents. All ensuing aberrant behavior of Arabidopsis dmc1 meiotic chromosomes is likely to result from this initial failure to constitute bivalents. In yeast dmc1 mutants, interhomolog recombination is markedly reduced, and synaptonemal complex establishment is strongly delayed (
The characteristics of the Arabidopsis dmc1 mutantreduced fertility and disturbed meiosisargue that the Dmc1 function is conserved in plants. Nevertheless, the meiotic disorders caused by the dmc1 mutation do not lead to the same severe phenotype in Arabidopsis as in mouse or in some yeast strains. In particular, meiosis is completed in the Arabidopsis mutants, whereas dmc1 mutations can trigger meiotic arrest during early prophase in yeast and meiotic arrest and apoptotic cell death in mouse (
In yeast, the DSBs that initiate meiotic recombination are repaired by a Dmc1-dependent homologous recombination process, and this conditions further progression of the cells through meiosis. Dmc1 mutants that do not form DSBs do not undergo meiotic arrest (
Two hypotheses might explain how meiosis might be completed without chromosome breakage in the Arabidopsis dmc1 mutant: either no meiotic DSBs are formed in the dmc1 mutant or DSBs are created but efficiently repaired. Meiotic DSBs are specifically created in yeast by Spo11, a type II topoisomerase (
It is possible that DSBs are not formed in Arabidopsis dmc1 plants. We think it unlikely that Dmc1 directly promotes the formation of DSBs because this has not been observed for Dmc1 or any RecA homologs in other species. As for the second hypothesis, if meiotic DSBs are created in the Arabidopsis dmc1 mutant, they are not left unrepaired. Two pathways are known to be involved in DNA DSB repair: one relies on homologous recombination, and the other acts via DNA end joining (
It is known that in higher eukaryotes, more than in yeast, DNA end joining significantly participates in DSB repair (
The meiotic products issued from an aberrant meiosis cannot contain a normal complement of chromosomes. This likely explains why microspores produced by the dmc1 anthers are heterogeneous in size, which is a common characteristic of meiotic mutants and is considered to reflect variable chromosomal DNA content. Haplosufficiency is considered critical for the development of a functional gametophyte from the microspores and megaspores (
We also observed a strong clustering of callose in most of the mutant ovules at the time of fertilization. Callose deposition has been proposed to be associated with cell death in plants ( It is intriguing that a relatively high level of viable progeny is produced by the Arabidopsis dmc1 mutant. How can chromosomes that did not form bivalents partition correctly? The residual fertility in the dmc1 mutant (1.5%) closely correlates with the random segregation of five (n = 5) chromosomes (Pn = 5 = [1/2]5 = 3%). This excludes that massive lethality or arrest would result from a failure of bivalent formation per se. Therefore, its low chromosome number offers a pathway for Arabidopsis to partly escape the consequences of a dmc1 mutation. The altered progeny issued from dmc1 mutant plants would thus represent various surviving aneuploids. Yeast, on the other hand, with 16 chromosome pairs, is much less likely to end up with viable spores after their random segregation.
Strains
Nucleic Acid Procedures
For RNA gel blot analysis, RNA was extracted in Trizol (Gibco BRL), according to the manufacturer's protocol. Twenty-five micrograms of total RNA was loaded on a denaturing gel. Electrophoresis, transfer to Hybond N+ membranes (Amersham), and 32P radiolabeling of probes were done according to standard techniques (
Plant Transformation
Cytological Analysis
Chromosomes in pollen mother cells were observed by fluorescence microscopy (Axiophot, Zeiss, Germany) after 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole staining (
Graphics
We are grateful to Drs. Raymond Devoret, Kathleen Smith, Alain Tissier, and Denise Zickler for critical reading of the manuscript; members of Dr. Catherine Bergounioux's laboratory for helpful discussions; Dr. Bernard Hugueny for his contribution; Thi Hai Phan for excellent technical assistance; Dr. Kenneth Feldmann for providing access to the T-DNA mutant collection; and Dr. Pal Maliga for kindly providing the pPZP binary vectors. We also thank Jean-Paul Bares and Gilles Santé for excellent plant maintenance and Roland Boyer for photographic work. This work was supported by Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Rhône-Poulenc, Biogemma and Tepral (M.-P.D. and F.C.), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (C.H., O.G., and D.V.) and Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (F.B.). F.C. is the recipient of a Ministère de l'Education Nationale, de la Recherche et de la Technologie fellowship.
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