Network Rewiring of Homologous Recombination Enzymes during Mitotic Proliferation and Meiosis.
Authors
- P. Wild
- A. Susperregui
- I. Piazza
- C. Dörig
- A. Oke
- M. Arter
- M. Yamaguchi
- A.T. Hilditch
- K. Vuina
- K.C. Chan
- T. Gromova
- J.E. Haber
- J.C. Fung
- P. Picotti
- J. Matos
Journal
- Molecular Cell
Citation
- Mol Cell 75 (4): 859-874
Abstract
Homologous recombination (HR) is essential for high-fidelity DNA repair during mitotic proliferation and meiosis. Yet, context-specific modifications must tailor the recombination machinery to avoid (mitosis) or enforce (meiosis) the formation of reciprocal exchanges-crossovers-between recombining chromosomes. To obtain molecular insight into how crossover control is achieved, we affinity purified 7 DNA-processing enzymes that channel HR intermediates into crossovers or noncrossovers from vegetative cells or cells undergoing meiosis. Using mass spectrometry, we provide a global characterization of their composition and reveal mitosis- and meiosis-specific modules in the interaction networks. Functional analyses of meiosis-specific interactors of MutLγ-Exo1 identified Rtk1, Caf120, and Chd1 as regulators of crossing-over. Chd1, which transiently associates with Exo1 at the prophase-to-metaphase I transition, enables the formation of MutLγ-dependent crossovers through its conserved ability to bind and displace nucleosomes. Thus, rewiring of the HR network, coupled to chromatin remodeling, promotes context-specific control of the recombination outcome.