Asy2/Mer2: an evolutionarily conserved mediator of meiotic recombination, pairing, and global chromosome compaction

Author:

Tessé Sophie,Bourbon Henri-Marc,Debuchy Robert,Budin Karine,Dubois Emeline,Liangran Zhang,Antoine Romain,Piolot Tristan,Kleckner Nancy,Zickler Denise,Espagne Eric

Abstract

Meiosis is the cellular program by which a diploid cell gives rise to haploid gametes for sexual reproduction. Meiotic progression depends on tight physical and functional coupling of recombination steps at the DNA level with specific organizational features of meiotic-prophase chromosomes. The present study reveals that every step of this coupling is mediated by a single molecule: Asy2/Mer2. We show that Mer2, identified so far only in budding and fission yeasts, is in fact evolutionarily conserved from fungi (Mer2/Rec15/Asy2/Bad42) to plants (PRD3/PAIR1) and mammals (IHO1). In yeasts, Mer2 mediates assembly of recombination–initiation complexes and double-strand breaks (DSBs). This role is conserved in the fungus Sordaria. However, functional analysis of 13 mer2 mutants and successive localization of Mer2 to axis, synaptonemal complex (SC), and chromatin revealed, in addition, three further important functions. First, after DSB formation, Mer2 is required for pairing by mediating homolog spatial juxtaposition, with implications for crossover (CO) patterning/interference. Second, Mer2 participates in the transfer/maintenance and release of recombination complexes to/from the SC central region. Third, after completion of recombination, potentially dependent on SUMOylation, Mer2 mediates global chromosome compaction and post-recombination chiasma development. Thus, beyond its role as a recombinosome–axis/SC linker molecule, Mer2 has important functions in relation to basic chromosome structure.

Funder

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

National Institutes of Health

CNRS

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation, China

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Subject

Developmental Biology,Genetics

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