Correspondence to P.E. Cohen: pc242{at}cornell.edu
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P.E. Cohen's present address is Dept. of Biomedical Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853.
Abbreviations used in this paper: DDB, double dense body; dHJ, double Holliday junction; DSB, DNA double strand break; MLH1 and 3, MutL homologue 1 and 3; MMR, mismatch repair; MN, meiotic nodule; MSH26, MutS homologue; PAR, pseudoautosomal region; PMS2, postmeiotic segregation 2; TNR, trinucleotide repeat.
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Introduction |
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After MutS association with the DNA, a heterodimeric complex of MutL homologues is recruited. Four mammalian MutL homologues exist, but the principal heterodimers that function in mitotic repair and meiotic reciprocal recombination are MLH1PMS2 (postmeiotic segregation 2) and MLH1MLH3, respectively (Kolodner and Marsischky, 1999; Flores-Rozas and Kolodner, 2000), whereas in yeast these heterodimers are represented by Mlh1Pms1 and Mlh1Mlh3 (Nakagawa et al., 1999; Wang et al., 1999; Hoffmann and Borts, 2004).
The mammalian meiotic MMR complex, consisting of MSH4, MSH5, MLH1, and MLH3, has been implicated in the processing of DNA double strand breaks (DSB) through the double Holliday junction (dHJ) recombination intermediate repair pathway that results in reciprocal crossover events between parental homologous chromosomes (Ross-Macdonald and Roeder, 1994; Hollingsworth et al., 1995; Novak et al., 2001; Borner et al., 2004; Hoffmann and Borts, 2004; Surtees et al., 2004). Studies in mouse (Kneitz et al., 2000; Santucci-Darmanin et al., 2000; Moens et al., 2002) and human germ cells (Lenzi et al., 2005) show that MSH4MSH5 appear at recombination intermediates, as part of the multiprotein meiotic nodule (MN), early in prophase I and accumulate at frequencies that far exceed the eventual number of crossover sites (Kneitz et al., 2000). In vitro biochemical studies suggest that this heterodimer forms a sliding clamp that associates with dHJ structures at zygonema (Snowden et al., 2004) a subset of which may be stabilized by interactions with MLH1MLH3 heterodimers at pachynema. It is these sites that will eventually become the crossovers that ensure accurate chromosomal segregation at the first meiotic division. The additional MSH4MSH5 sites that are not stabilized by MLH1MLH3 are then repaired through noncrossover mechanisms.
The temporal dynamics of MMR protein association with MNs raises the question of how MLH1 and MLH3 selects only a subset of MSH4MSH5 sites to become crossover events. Previous studies have demonstrated that MLH3-only foci are apparent during pachynema of prophase I, whereas MLH1 appearance at crossovers is dependent on MLH3 (Lipkin et al., 2002). This suggests an MLH3-driven mechanism for dHJ selection. Alternatively, the involvement of a third MutL homologue, PMS2, has been suggested, at least in males, by the observation that Pms2/ males are sterile, whereas females remain fertile (Baker et al., 1995). By contrast, mutation of Mlh1 or Mlh3 results in sterility of both males and females (Baker et al., 1996; Edelmann et al., 1996; Woods et al., 1999; Lipkin et al., 2002). Interestingly, however, although germline crossover rates are decreased to 10% in male and female mice lacking Mlh1 (Baker et al., 1996; Woods et al., 1999), they appear to be unaffected in male mice lacking Pms2 (Qin et al., 2002). Because MLH1 is capable of heterodimerizing with both MLH3 and PMS2, this prompted us to explore the interactions between these MutL homologues at the chromosomal level in spermatocytes from wild-type mice, and from Mlh1-, Mlh3-, and Pms2-null animals.
Using a variety of cytological and molecular techniques, we present genetic evidence that MLH3 associates with complexes involving both MSH2MSH3 and MSH4MSH5 in mammalian meiocytes, and that only the latter is necessary for reciprocal recombination. A second complex, consisting of MutSß (MSH2MSH3) together with MLH3, associates with regions of the genome that are rich in repetitive sequences, such as the major and minor satellites of the centromere region and the Y chromosome, suggesting a new role for MMR complexes in the mammalian germline.
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Results |
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Our previous studies demonstrated that MLH1 fails to localize to SCs in spermatocytes from Mlh3/ males and that this was associated with loss of MNs at pachynema and absence of crossovers at metaphase (Lipkin et al., 2002). In view of the temporal dissociation of MLH1 and MLH3 accumulation observed in the current study, we hypothesized that MLH3 foci might localize independently of MLH1 on SCs from Mlh1/ spermatocytes. Indeed, immunogold-labeled SCs from Mlh1/ spermatocytes revealed large residual MNs that were loaded with MLH3 (Fig. 1 F). Quantitation of MLH3- and MLH1-containing foci (by immunofluorescence microscopy) on SCs from spermatocytes of all MMR genotypes confirmed this observation, demonstrating that accumulation of MLH3 in Mlh1/ spermatocytes occurs at a significantly lower frequency than that in wild-type spermatocytes (Fig. 1 E; P < 0.0001 by Mann-Whitney U test), whereas MLH1 fails to localize at all on SCs of Mlh3/ spermatocytes, as described previously (Fig. 1 E; Lipkin et al., 2002).
Localization of MLH3, and occasionally MLH1, with CREST-positive regions of wild-type and Pms2/ male chromosomes reveals an unexpected centromere-associated MMR complex
In view of the apparently normal recombination frequency in spermatocytes of Pms2/ males (Fig. 1; Qin et al., 2002), we investigated whether other MMR-related functions might be disrupted in these animals. Examination of the SCs from Pms2/ males by EM revealed an accumulation of both MLH1 and MLH3 close to the centromere (Fig. 2 A), a region that is usually not subject to crossing over (Broman et al., 1998; Froenicke et al., 2002) and is therefore not expected to be positive for this MutL complex. Examination of the centromere regions from other MMR-deficient mouse strains revealed similar, but reduced frequency of, localization of MLH3 in spermatocytes from wild-type (Fig. 2 B) and Mlh1/ males (Fig. 2 C), but not from Mlh3/ males (Fig. 2 D). In wild-type and Mlh1/ males, MLH3 associated with 1525% of all spermatocyte autosomal centromeres. Little if any MLH1 was associated with centromere regions in wild-type, Mlh1/, or Mlh3/ mice (Fig. 2, BE). The localization of MLH3 at centromeres increased to include >85% of centromere regions in spermatocytes from Pms2/ males, and colocalized at most of these sites (>65% of total centromeres) with MLH1 (Fig. 2 E). The EM images of immunogold-labeled spermatocyte spread preparations were supported by similar localization at the immunofluorescence level (Fig. S1 available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200506170/DC1), but was much weaker using fluorescently-labeled secondary antibodies (which are monoclonal antibodies) than using gold-labeled secondaries (polyclonal antibodies). The EM analysis involves a higher concentration of primary antibody, coupled with DNaseI digestion of heterochromatin to improve accessibility of the antibodies to the centromere sites, perhaps explaining the difference in staining intensity.
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The localization of MLH3 (and in some cases, MLH1) at the centromere prompted us to investigate the specificity of this association with centromere-associated repeats. We performed chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) experiments using either crude germ cell extracts (consisting of mixed populations of germ cells) or isolated pachytene spermatocytes (estimated to be >95% pure). MLH3-containing complexes were immunoprecipitated using an anti-MLH3 antibody, followed by amplification using degenerate oligonucleotide PCR (Telenius et al., 1992) and subsequent slot-blot analysis using PCR-generated probes specific to mouse major and/or minor satellite sequences (Garagna et al., 2002). A B2 SINE element probe was used as a loading control (Serdobova and Kramerov, 1998), representing a ubiquitous genome-wide repeat element, and showing that MLH3 does not bind to all repeat sequences throughout the genome.
ChIP of mixed germ cell extracts from Pms2/ males with the anti-MLH3 antibody enriched centromeric major/minor satellite sequences above control levels at comparable rates to that seen for polyclonal CREST serum, which recognizes a variety of CENPs (Fig. 4, A and B). The enrichment of centromere repeats in Pms2/ spermatocytes with anti-MLH3 antibody or with CREST was statistically elevated compared with mock controls (unpaired t tests, P < 0.0001). No enrichment of similar regions was found in ChIP extracts from Mlh1/ and Mlh3/ males, although specificity of enrichment was confirmed by PCR of random genomic sequences (ß-actin) using the same immunoprecipitates (Fig. S2 available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200506170/DC1).
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Association of MLH3 on the nonpseudoautosomal region of the Y chromosome
To investigate the association of the MMR machinery with other repetitive sequences in the genome, we explored the localization of MLH3 across the Y chromosome, which in humans and mice contains large palindromic repeat sequences (Bishop et al., 1985; Singh et al., 1994; Rozen et al., 2003; Skaletsky et al., 2003) and which, like the centromere, is refractory to reciprocal recombination except at the X-Y pseudoautosomal region (PAR). MLH3 localizes in dense foci along the Y chromosome in some pachytene spermatocytes from wild-type, Pms2/ and Mlh1/ males (Fig. 5 A, Pms2/ example shown), but the localization is not consistent among spermatocyte populations. In total, of the more than 500 nuclei examined from Pms2/ males, 10% exhibited the Y chromosome accumulation of MLH3. No MLH1 association was found along the Y chromosome in wild-type or in Pms2/ spermatocytes (unpublished data). ChIP analysis confirmed the localization of MLH3 (Fig. 5, B and C), and the absence of MLH1 (unpublished data), on Y chromosome sequences from Pms2/ males.
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Immunofluorescence analysis of chromosome preparations from wild-type spermatocytes demonstrated that MSH2 and MSH3 localize strongly to the centromere (Fig. 6, AF) and on the sex chromosomes (Fig. 6, C and F, arrows), and that this localization is as frequent in wild-type spermatocytes as it is in Pms2/ males (Fig. 7, AC and J). These observations indicate that the association of MSH2MSH3-containing complexes appear to be a feature of normal prophase I and are not specifically up-regulated in the absence of PMS2. No association of MSH2 with these genomic regions is observed in spermatocytes from Msh3/ males either by immunofluorescence or EM (Fig. 6 G and Fig. 7, DF), indicating that MSH3 is required for MSH2 localization to these sites. By contrast, immunofluorescence and immunogold localization of MSH2 at the centromere is not affected in spermatocytes from Msh4/, Msh5/, or Msh6/ males (Fig. 6, H and I, and Fig. 7, GJ). MSH2, and to a lesser degree MSH3, localizes along the chromosomes, but at an intensity that is far lower than that seen at the centromere (Fig. 6, A and D, arrowheads; Fig. 7, A and G, arrowheads). This interstitial localization could be the result of canonical MMR activity.
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Combined antibodies against MSH2MSH3 were used in ChIP assays and were shown to enrich sequences within the centromeric (unpublished data) and Y chromosome repeat domains (Fig. 5, B and C). This MSH2MSH3 enrichment of repetitive sequences is observed in spermatocyte extracts from wild-type males as well as in Pms2/ extracts, whereas MLH3 enrichment is only observed in the absence of PMS2. These data confirm the immunolocalization observations indicating that MSH2MSH3 is constitutively associated with centromeric repetitive sequences and the Y chromosome. This repeat association appears to be meiosis-specific as no centromeric localization of MSH2MSH3 or MLH3 was observed in somatic cells in vitro (unpublished data).
Analysis of Msh2/Pms2/ double-null males suggests that PMS2 is not acting directly at the centromere region
The meiotic failure observed in Pms2/ males together with the hyperlocalization of MLH1MLH3 at the spermatocyte centromeres in these mice indicated a role for PMS2 at centromere repeats, possibly dependent on MSH2MSH3. Confounding this hypothesis, however, is the normal fertility in Msh2/ males. One possible explanation is that MSH2MSH3 heterodimers act as a repeat tract surveillance mechanism that, under normal circumstances, signals to a PMS2-containing complex to effect repeat-specific processes. In the absence of PMS2, the inability of MSH2MSH3 to signal downstream events would result in checkpoint-induced apoptotic removal of the germ cells, and subsequent infertility, but the absence of MSH2 would prevent checkpoint activation and hence allow meiotic progression even in the absence of PMS2. If true, we hypothesized that the removal of MSH2 in the Pms2/ males would restore spermatogenesis. To test this, we generated double-null males for Msh2 and Pms2, and counted epididymal sperm in adult males. Sperm numbers in Msh2/Pms2+/ males were close to that found in double heterozygous males (Table I). As expected, sperm numbers in Msh2+/Pms2/ males was reduced to 3.5% of normal, but swimming sperm were observed, albeit at a very reduced frequency (Table I). Sperm numbers in Msh2/Pms2/ were similar to that seen in Pms2/ single nulls, with a few (8 out of a total of 1,102 sperm counted) swimming sperm. Thus, deletion of Msh2 does not restore the fertility of Pms2/ males.
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Discussion |
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Taken together these observations suggest that MLH1MLH3 is the sole MutL heterodimer responsible for processing of meiotic crossovers and rule out a direct function for PMS2 in crossing over, paralleling the situation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Wang et al., 1999). In addition, these data demonstrate the existence of an additional meiotic MMR complex that associates specifically with sites of repetitive DNA at sites that are presumed to be refractory to reciprocal recombination events. It was not surprising, therefore, to find an MMR complex driven by MSH2MSH3 instead of MSH4MSH5. Also of significance is the fact that MLH3 can associate with chromosome regions independently of MLH1, suggesting the existence of a new MutL complex that is either stabilized by MLH1 or that can function independently of other MutL homologues. The MLH3-only complex could be inactive in terms of MMR activity, but could instead trigger alternative downstream events that would result in genome stabilization.
The up-regulation of centromere-associated MMR complexes in Pms2/ males suggests that the absence of PMS2 facilitates the accumulation of repeat-associated MMR complexes, but does not necessarily point to any direct role for PMS2 at these sites. Msh2/Pms2/ males are also sterile while Msh2/ males are fertile, arguing against a role for PMS2 at the centromere. Instead, our results show that the loss of PMS2 results in an accumulation of the MSH2MSH3MLH1MLH3 complex at sites of repetitive DNA as a secondary effect. We propose that PMS2 is working at other sites during spermatogenesis, in combination with MSH2, and that the loss of PMS2 at these sites leads to a redistribution of MMR complexes through the genome, resulting in increased association of MLH1MLH3 with centromeric sequences (and, to a lesser extent, with sites of DSB processing). Alternatively, or in addition, the removal of PMS2 increases the need for MMR complexes at sites of repetitive DNA because of the general increase in genome instability in Pms2/ mice. Moreover, we cannot rule out the possibility that the effect of Pms2 deletion occurs at an earlier point in spermatogenesis, possibly during postreplicative repair at premeiotic S-phase, and that the meiotic failure is secondary to these earlier events. Indeed, Richardson et al. (2000) demonstrated high levels of mRNA and protein expression in mouse spermatogonia (Richardson et al., 2000), suggesting perhaps that PMS2 may be functioning at this earlier time in spermatogenesis.
Previous studies have suggested that tandem repeats, such as those found in human satellite centromeric DNA, are susceptible to mispairing and other genome destabilizing events. They are conserved by gene conversion (Greig et al., 1993; Warburton et al., 1993; Schindelhauer and Schwarz, 2002), as are palindromic repeat units on the Y (Rozen et al., 2003; Skaletsky et al., 2003). Given that localization of MMR proteins to these sites is determined by MSH2MSH3, our data support a function in noncrossover and/or repair events at these tandem repeat units, rather than a function in MSH4MSH5-driven reciprocal recombination. In addition, the antirecombinational role of MSH2MSH3 (Lin et al., 2004) could be beneficial at sites such as the centromere to prevent deleterious crossover events during prophase I, and may explain the high degree of conservation amongst centromere repeat regions.
The dynamics of MMR complex association with repetitive sequences at the centromere and on the Y chromosome during meiosis is reminiscent of the dynamics of MMR involvement in the expansion of simple trinucleotide repeat (TNR) sequences that give rise to complex disorders such as Huntington disease (Kovtun et al., 2001; Kovtun and McMurray, 2001) and myotonic dystrophy (van den Broek et al., 2002; Nag, 2003). The secondary structures that arise as a result of TNR misalignments are substrates for MSH2 (Pearson et al., 1997), and mutations in Msh2 prevent CAGCTG repeat expansion at the Huntington disease Hdh locus (Manley et al., 1999). In somatic cells, these events involve MSH3 because TNR expansion in myotonic dystrophy knock-in mice is abolished on a Msh3-null background (van den Broek et al., 2002). These MutSß-dependent events, both in the germ line and in somatic cells, could involve canonical MMR and/or recombination processes or, as has been suggested, could instead result from the stabilization and protection from repair of CAGCTG hairpin structures (Manley et al., 1999; Kovtun and McMurray, 2001) resulting from misalignment and looping of tandem triplet repeats (Moore et al., 1999).
Secondary looping structures could also play roles in MMR-driven events during meiosis. Heteroduplexes formed during recombination in yeast can include insertions as large as 5.6 kb in size (Kearney et al., 2001) and are targeted specifically by Msh2Msh3 (Kearney et al., 2001). These substrates may induce very different biochemical events to the traditional MMR pathway and may therefore initiate a different cascade of downstream events. Moreover, long repeat tracts, involving triplet CAG motifs or large palindromes, induce DSB formation during yeast meiosis (Jankowski et al., 2000; Nasar et al., 2000; Nag, 2003) that could give rise to recombinational repair events. This raises the possibility that the repeat tracts and palindromes in the centromere regions and on the Y chromosome could present similar recombinational substrates during murine meiosis, inducing DSBs in late pachynema through the action of SPO11, which is still present during that time (Keeney et al., 1999; Romanienko and Camerini-Otero, 1999), that then need to be repaired by recombinational events, with a preference for noncrossover mechanisms. However, this possibility is tempered by the failure to detect other DSB repair machinery components (RAD51) at these sites (unpublished data).
In conclusion, our results suggest a novel function for the MMR machinery during mammalian meiosis, whereby MSH2MSH3 are present as a surveillance mechanism, to restore repeat frequency, through stabilization/maintenance of hairpin structures present within the context of tandem repeats, and/or through suppression of reciprocal recombination events resulting from secondary structureinduced DSB formation, that could result in chromosomal translocations, enlarged loops, and other cytogenetic errors. Should repeat units become misaligned or out of register, a resulting single stranded loop structure would be detected by the surveillance complex and would activate downstream (repair) events involving, at the very least, MLH3, and that would ultimately effect the restoration of unit numbers.
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Materials and methods |
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Chromosome preparations
The standard chromosome spreading protocol has been described previously for our laboratory (Lenzi et al., 2005). The nuclear contents of whole-mount spermatocytes (or oocytes) were displayed by drying down a cell suspension, in hypotonic buffer, from either testis, or ovary, in 1% paraformaldehyde containing 0.15% Triton X-100 (Peters et al., 1997). Whole testes or ovaries were incubated on ice for 60 min in hypotonic extraction buffer (HEB; 30 mM Tris, pH 8.2, 50 mM sucrose, 17 mM trisodium citrate dihydrate, 5 mM EDTA, 0.5 mM DTT, and 0.5 mM PMSF). Either a one-inch length of tubule, or a whole ovary, were placed in a 20-µl drop of 100 mM sucrose, pH 8.2, the tissue was macerated, and a second 20-µl drop of sucrose solution was added and the cell suspension was pipetted up and down several times. Remnant pieces of tubule were removed. Cleaned slides were dipped in the paraformaldehyde and Triton X-100 solution, and most liquid was drained off, such that only enough liquid remained to coat the slide. 20 µl of the cell suspension was added in one corner and the cells were slowly dispersed, first in a horizontal direction and then vertical. The remaining 20 µl of cell suspension was used to make a second slide and both were placed in a humid chamber to dry slowly at RT for 2 h. The slides were washed three times for 1 min in 0.4% Kodak Photo-Flo 200 and air dried for at least 15 min. For EM preparations, to make the SCs accessible to immunogold grains, the slides were DNaseI treated (1 µl/ml of DMEM) before being air dried (Moens et al., 2002). The slides were washed and blocked (three times for 10 min each) in PBS and incubated in primary antibodies overnight at RT in a humid chamber. Primary antibodies were used at varying concentrations, and generally a 10-fold higher concentration was used for EM than immunofluorescence. After washes, slides were incubated in secondary antibodies, conjugated to either fluorochrome or colloidal gold (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories), for 2 h at 37°C. After washes the slides were mounted with ProLong Antifade (Invitrogen) for fluorescence microscopy. Images were captured on a Olympus IX81 microscope attached to a 12-bit Cooke Sensicam CCD instrument and sent to IP Lab software.
For EM, slides were incubated in 4% alcoholic phosphotungstic acid for 15 min, followed by three 1-min washes in 95% ethanol, to enhance visualization of MNs. Slides were air dried and then dipped in 0.25% formvar (Electron Microscopy Sciences) and air dried under glass. The plastic was scored, treated with 25% hydrofluoric acid, and floated off in water with attached cells. Plastic was transferred to EM grids and used for transmission EM (JEOL 1200EX).
Antibodies
The numerous antibodies used were obtained from a variety of sources: mouse antihuman MLH1 antibody (BD Biosciences, clone G168-15); mouse antihuman MSH2 (clone G219-1129; BD Biosciences); and mouse antihuman MSH3 (clone 52; BD Biosciences). In addition, the following antibodies have been generated in our laboratory or by our collaborators: rabbit anti-MLH3 (Lipkin et al., 2002), rabbit antihamster COR1 to detect SYCP3 (Lenzi et al., 2005), and mouse antihamster COR1 (Lenzi et al., 2005).
Quantitation and statistical analysis
Immunofluorescence chromosome counts and cell staging were performed by at least three independent observers, compiled using Excel, and then analyzed using the statistical software package, Prism 3.0 (GraphPad Software). Staging of prophase I cells was performed using well-defined criteria for SC morphology, XY synapsis, and double dense body (DDB) and sex body status (Ashley and Plug, 1998; Moens et al., 2002). For such studies, we used previously published criteria (Dresser et al., 1987; Allen et al., 1988; Backer et al., 1988). Pachynema was divided into early, mid, and late stages on the basis of chromosome appearance, degree of compaction, XY status, and DDB formation. In early pachynema, the XY is synapsed along most of the length of the PAR and much of the X chromosome appears synapsed. Small regions of the autosomes may not be synapsed at this point. By mid-pachynema, the autosomes are completely synapsed and further compacted, whereas the XY is synapsed up to 20% of the length of the X chromosomes. The DDB appears at this time and the sex body becomes apparent. By late pachynema, only the tip of the PAR remains synapsed, the sex body is much more distinct, and the DDB is still present. Note that the MLH3 (and MLH1) signal found at the centromere was not included in our MN focus counts depicted in Fig. 1 and that these populations are, we believe, distinct from one another.
Gold grain counts of centromere-associated proteins were counted at the EM level. For each staining preparation, counts were made from spermatocytes of at least three animals, with no fewer than 200 centromeres counted per animal, including up to 19 autosomes from a single cell being counted. In some cases fewer autosomes were counted in cells whose total chromosome count was not completely visible. Equivalent telomere counts were performed for each preparation as matched controls. In all cases, the number of centromeres/telomeres having one, two or three, or more than four gold grains were tabulated, but the threshold for specificity was set at more than four gold grains.
Chromatin immunoprecipitation
Adult testes were decapsulated, placed in a drop of cell culture media, minced, and seminiferous tubules squeezed to release germ cells. Alternatively, pure populations of pachytene spermatocytes were obtained by sedimentation velocity gradient ("STA-PUT"; Romrell et al., 1976). Germ cells were taken up in 1 ml of cell culture media and cross-linking was performed at RT for 5 min by addition of formaldehyde to 1% concentration. Cross-linking was stopped by addition of glycine to 0.125 M. Cells were collected by centrifugation, washed in PBS, and lysed in 1 ml of FA lysis buffer (50 mM Hepes, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% sodium deoxycholate, 0.1% SDS, pH 7.5) with addition of protease inhibitors. Cell lysates were sonicated eight times for 20 s each at 20% output setting, and lysates were cleared of cell debris by centrifugation. For each immunoprecipitation 1/10 of the total testis lysate volume was diluted 10 times in FA buffer and precleared with 2 µg sheared salmon sperm DNA, 10 µl of preimmune serum and protein A/G-Sepharose slurry for 1 h at 4°C. Immunoprecipitation was performed overnight at 4°C with specific antibodies. After immunoprecipitation, protein A/G- Sepharose slurry was added and the incubation was continued for 1 h. Precipitates were washed sequentially for 5 min each in FA buffer, FA buffer with 0.5 M NaCl, LiCl wash buffer (10 mM TrisCl, 0.25 M LiCl, 1 mM EDTA, 0.5% Nonidet P-40, 0.5% sodium deoxycholate), and TE buffer. The immune complexes were eluted from the beads by addition of 50 mM Tris, 10 mM EDTA, 1% SDS. Cross-linking was reversed by incubation at 65°C for at least 6 h DNA fragments were purified by phenol-chloroform-isoamyl alcohol extraction and ethanol precipitation. Equal aliquots from each immunoprecipitation were amplified using degenerate oligonucleotide PCR method of Telenius et al. (1992). Products of amplification were analyzed by slot-blot hybridization, using "North2South" hybridization kit (Pierce Chemical Co.). Probes for hybridization were generated by PCR according to published sequences for the mouse minor and major satellite probe (Garagna et al., 2002), B2 SINE element probe (Serdobova and Kramerov, 1998), and mouse Y chromosomespecific LINE-1 probe (DYzEms10 locus; Navin et al., 1996).
Online supplemental material
Two figures are presented as supplemental data items. Fig. S1 shows MLH3 localization at the centromere of spermatocytes from Pms2/ males. Fig. S2 provides validation of ChIP experiments used in this study. Online supplemental materials are available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200506170/DC1.
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Acknowledgments |
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This work was funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Development (RO1HD41012-01), The March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation (MOD-FY2002-282), and by start-up funding from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine to P.E. Cohen and by the National Cancer Institute (R01CA76329) to W. Edelmann. At the time that this work was conducted, A. Svetlanov was supported by training grant sponsorship to the Albert Einstein College of Medicine from The National Institute of General Medical Sciences (T32 GM 07491).
Submitted: 27 June 2005
Accepted: 4 October 2005
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