Using small palindromes to monitor meiotic double-strand-break-repair (DSBr) events, we demonstrate that two distinct classes of crossovers occur during meiosis in wild-type yeast. We found that crossovers accompanying 5:3 segregation of a palindrome show no conventional (i.e., positive) interference, while crossovers with 6:2 or normal 4:4 segregation for the same palindrome, in the same cross, do manifest interference. Our observations support the concept of a "non"-interference class and an interference class of meiotic double-strand-break-repair events, each with its own rules for mismatch repair of heteroduplexes. We further show that deletion of MSH4 reduces crossover tetrads with 6:2 or normal 4:4 segregation more than it does those with 5:3 segregation, consistent with Msh4p specifically promoting formation of crossovers in the interference class. Additionally, we present evidence that an ndj1 mutation causes a shift of noncrossovers to crossovers specifically within the "non"-interference class of DSBr events. We use these and other data in support of a model in which meiotic recombination occurs in two phases - one specializing in homolog pairing, the other in disjunction - and each producing both noncrossovers and crossovers. Copyright © 2008 by the Genetics Society of America.
CITATION STYLE
Getz, T. J., Banse, S. A., Young, L. S., Banse, A. V., Swanson, J., Wang, G. M., … Stahl, F. W. (2008). Reduced mismatch repair of heteroduplexes reveals “non”- interfering crossing over in wild-type Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Genetics, 178(3), 1251–1269. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.106.067603
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