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Meiotic Double-Strand Break Proteins Influence Repair Pathway Utilization.

Nicolas MacaisneZebulin KesslerJudith L Yanowitz
Published in: Genetics (2018)
Double-strand breaks (DSBs) are among the most deleterious lesions DNA can endure. Yet, DSBs are programmed at the onset of meiosis, and are required to facilitate appropriate reduction of ploidy in daughter cells. Repair of these breaks is tightly controlled to favor homologous recombination (HR)-the only repair pathway that can form crossovers. However, little is known about how the activities of alternative repair pathways are regulated at these stages. We discovered an unexpected synthetic interaction between the DSB machinery and strand-exchange proteins. Depleting the Caenorhabditis elegans DSB-promoting factors HIM-5 and DSB-2 suppresses the formation of chromosome fusions that arise in the absence of RAD-51 or other strand-exchange mediators. Our investigations reveal that nonhomologous and theta-mediated end joining (c-NHEJ and TMEJ, respectively) and single strand annealing (SSA) function redundantly to repair DSBs when HR is compromised, and that HIM-5 influences the utilization of TMEJ and SSA.
Keyphrases
  • dna repair
  • dna damage
  • induced apoptosis
  • gene expression
  • transcription factor
  • cell proliferation
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • single cell
  • cell cycle arrest
  • prefrontal cortex