Nucleic Acids Research, 2001, Vol. 29, No. 24 5052-5057
© 2001 Oxford University Press
Bypass of heterology during strand transfer by Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rad51 protein
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, 401 Barker Hall, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-3204, USA
Received August 24, 2001; Revised and Accepted October 10, 2001.
| ABSTRACT |
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During recombination-mediated repair of DNA double-strand breaks, strand transfer proteins must distinguish a homologous repair template from closely related genomic sequences. However, some tolerance by strand transfer proteins for sequence differences is also critical: too much stringency will prevent recombination between different alleles of the same gene, but too much tolerance will lead to illegitimate recombination. We characterized the heterology tolerance of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rad51 by testing bypass of small heterologous inserts in either the single- or double-stranded substrate of an in vitro strand transfer reaction that models the early steps of homologous recombination. We found that the yeast protein is rather stringent, only tolerating heterologies up to 9 bases long. The efficiency of heterology bypass depends on whether the insert is in the single- or double-stranded substrate, as well as on the location of the insert relative to the end of the double-stranded linear substrate. Rad51 is distinct in that it can catalyze strand transfer in either the 3'
5' or 5'
3' direction. We found that bypass of heterology was independent of the polarity of strand transfer, suggesting that the mechanism of 5'
3' transfer is the same as that of 3'
5' transfer. | INTRODUCTION |
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During the repair of DNA double-strand breaks, strand transfer proteins, such as the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rad51 protein, bind to single-stranded sequences generated at the break site and search the genome for homologous repair templates (1). If the stretch of DNA that contains the double-strand break has been recently replicated, the sister copy will provide a near perfect template. However, the more likely case in diploid organisms is that the repair template will be the allelic locus on the homologous chromosome. Because these chromosomes come from different parents, sequence differences will exist between the damaged DNA and the repair template. For repair to be successful, the ability of the strand transfer protein to tolerate sequence differences (heterology tolerance) must be finely tuned. If the protein is too stringent, recombination will be blocked by the polymorphisms between parents. If the protein is too tolerant, an incorrect template may be chosen from the potentially large number of closely related sequences throughout the genome, leading to chromosomal rearrangement.
Strand transfer proteins such as Rad51 have been characterized using an in vitro strand transfer reaction that mimics the early steps in double-strand break repair (1,2). In this reaction (see Fig. 1A), a nucleoprotein filament consisting of a single-stranded circular (ssC) DNA coated with Rad51 reacts with a homologous double-stranded linear (dsL) DNA. A single-stranded DNA-binding protein, such as yeast RPA, is required for efficient strand transfer (35). During transfer, the complementary strand of the dsL substrate anneals to the ssC substrate to form a strand transfer intermediate with three DNA strands (2,6; Scandellari et al., submitted for publication). If the substrates are homologous, ATP-dependent unidirectional branch migration continues until nicked circular (NC) and single-stranded linear (ssL) products are released (3,7). The two substrates, intermediate joint molecules, and two product DNAs are easily separated by agarose gel electrophoresis.
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We studied the heterology tolerance of Rad51 using defined insertions in the ssC or dsL substrates. If the insert is in the ssC substrate, the heterologous sequence must be extruded from the nucleoprotein filament before the ssC and dsL DNA can be brought back into register to complete the reaction (Fig. 1B). If the insert is in the dsL substrate, the insert must be denatured and then looped out before strand transfer can continue (Fig. 1C). Because the base pairs broken when bypassing the duplex insert are not reformed in the NC product, bypass of double-stranded inserts has an energetic penalty that bypass of single-stranded inserts does not have (8).
The ability of the Escherichia coli RecA protein to bypass heterologies during strand transfer has been well defined (810). RecA easily bypasses inserts of 20 bp and can even bypass inserts of up to 200 bp. While non-hydrolyzable ATP analogs allow RecA to promote substrate pairing and product formation by random branch migration, bypass of heterologous inserts requires ATP hydrolysis (11). Interestingly, the efficiency of bypass increases as the heterology is positioned closer to the end of the dsL substrate at which strand transfer initiates (9,12). This position effect suggests that the nucleoprotein filament interacts with homologous DNA distal to the insert and that this interaction aids bypass, perhaps by generating topological strain (12,13). There is evidence for distal interactions with RecA (12,14), but the mechanism of bypass enhancement is not understood.
Whereas RecA is the paradigmatic prokaryotic strand transfer protein, Rad51 protein, particularly that of yeast, has been central to the understanding of eukaryotic general recombination (15). Rad51 is homologous to RecA over about half its length and is the key homolog in vivo (3,16). RecA and Rad51 form similar nucleoprotein filaments, though RecA polymerizes along single-stranded DNA in the 5'
3' direction, whereas Rad51 polymerizes 3'
5' (15,17). For RecA, the direction of strand transfer, defined relative to the ssC substrate, is the same as the direction of polymerization (15). Rad51, however, is unlike any other strand transfer protein studied in that it can catalyze strand transfer in either the 3'
5' or 5'
3' direction. Rad51 always begins strand transfer at the single-stranded overhang that is complementary to the ssC DNA (18). The 5'
3' reaction was reported to yield more product (19). Both RecA and Rad51 require ATP hydrolysis for efficient strand transfer (3,20). Initial experiments characterizing the heterology bypass activity of Rad51 have been carried out (19).
We have described elsewhere the formation and structure of Rad51 strand transfer intermediates that accumulate when strand transfer is blocked by large heterologies (Scandellari et al., submitted for publication). The simplest intermediate, which we call joint molecule 1 (JM1), consists of a ssC substrate annealed to a dsL substrate (depicted in Fig. 1). A more complex intermediate, joint molecule 2 (JM2), is formed when a second dsL substrate reacts with a JM1 molecule. Both intermediate species can resolve to product.
Here we have studied the bypass of heterologies by Rad51 in a systematic fashion. We find that Rad51 is clearly more stringent than RecA, bypassing inserts no longer than 9 bp. Double-stranded inserts are bypassed less efficiently than single-stranded inserts, though the difference was much less than observed for RecA (9). The extent of bypass decreased as the insert was moved closer to the distal end of the dsL substrate. Interestingly, heterology bypass by Rad51 was identical in the 3'
5' and 5'
3' directions.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Protein purification
Rad51 was purified as described (3) except that the Sephacryl S200 column was omitted. In addition, the final MonoQ column was used twice, first to purify and then to concentrate the protein. Small aliquots of purified Rad51 were frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at 80°C. Replication protein A (RPA) was purified from yeast over-expressing all three subunits (21,22). It was stored in small, single-use aliquots at 80°C in 25 mM TrisHCl pH 7.5, 0.35 M KCl, 0.5 mM dithiothreitol, 0.5 mM EDTA and 10% glycerol.
Generation of pBluescript derivatives
Deletion derivatives of the pBluescript II SK+ phagemid (pBS; Stratagene) were constructed as described (Scandellari et al., submitted for publication) by digesting the wild-type plasmid at unique sites in the multiple cloning sequence with appropriate restriction enzymes, filling in overhangs with Klenow polymerase if necessary and ligating with DNA ligase. The resulting plasmids were named pBSdX, where X is the number of nucleotides deleted. pBSd4 was generated by cutting at EcoRV and EcoRI sites and filling in the latter overhang before ligation. Two pBSd6 derivatives were made: one cut with XhoI and SalI and the other with SpeI and XbaI. While all data presented here used the XhoISalI derivative, results from the other plasmid were indistinguishable. pBSd9 was made by digesting with ClaI and AccI. pBSd18 was made by digesting with EcoRV and SmaI. All deletion derivatives were verified by direct sequencing.
Whereas a deletion in one strand transfer reaction substrate is equivalent to an insert in the other, we find it clearer to discuss all reactions in terms of heterologous inserts.
DNA preparation
Supercoiled plasmid DNA was purified from E.coli using two cesium chloride/ethidium bromide isopycnic bandings (23). Double-stranded linear DNA substrates were obtained by digesting supercoiled DNA with the restriction enzymes (NEB) indicated. Single-stranded circular phagemid DNA was rescued from XL1-Blue E.coli cells containing pBS derivatives as described (24).
Strand transfer reactions
The Rad51 strand transfer reaction was performed as described (25). An aliquot of 7 µg Rad51 was added to 0.12 µg ssC DNA in 7.5 µl of 40 mM potassium MOPS pH 7.2, 3 mM MgCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol and 2.5 mM ATP. After 5 min at 37°C, 1.5 µg RPA was added and incubation continued for 10 min. Finally, 0.24 µg dsL DNA and spermidine to 4 mM were added for a total reaction volume of 13 µl. Incubation was continued for 120 min. The reaction was stopped by adding 1 vol of 20 mM TrisHCl pH 7.5, 20 mM EDTA pH 8.0, 1% SDS and 1 mg/ml proteinase K, and incubating for another 30 min at 37°C. The DNA was resolved by electrophoresis through a 0.9% agarose gel in Trisborate buffer (1.11.9 V/cm for 600850 V·h) and then visualized by staining with ethidium bromide or by Southern blotting. Quantification of Southern blots was done with a Fuji phosphorimager.
The apparent low level of bypass of even very long inserts (Fig. 4) is an artifact due to trace NC DNA in either the dsL or the ssC DNA preparation. We therefore defined the baseline for true heterologous bypass as that in the reactions with 14 or 18 base inserts, which completely block bypass.
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| RESULTS |
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Effect of the length of a heterologous insert
We measured the ability of Rad51 to bypass heterologies as a function of the length of single-stranded or double-stranded inserts, as diagrammed in Figure 1. Each experiment used dsL substrates linearized with the same restriction enzyme so that the insert position was constant and only the insert length varied. Homologous reactions were run for each experiment (Fig. 2A, lanes 26) to verify that all the DNAs were competent for strand transfer and to serve as standards for normalization. Each heterologous reaction was compared to the two homologous reactions that corresponded to its substrates. In reactions with single-stranded inserts we found that NC product formation decreased rapidly as insert length increased (Fig. 2A, lanes 711). With a 9 base insert, only 20% as much product was formed compared with the homologous control reactions (Fig. 2B). With inserts of 14 or 18 bases, no product was detected. We interpolated the insert length at which the heterology blocked 50% of strand transfer to be 4.9 bases. Double-stranded inserts caused a sharper fall-off of product formation with insert length (Fig. 2A, lanes 1216, and B). NC product decreased to
20% of controls with only a 6 bp insert.
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Failure to form product was not due to an inability of the substrates to initiate strand transfer, as kinetic experiments showed that joint molecules were formed with identical efficiency in homologous and heterologous reactions (data not shown). As expected, joint molecules comprise a greater percentage of the reacted DNA in heterologous reactions than in homologous reactions, as they cannot resolve to product (Fig. 2A).
Effect of the position of a heterologous insert
Having characterized the dependence of bypass on insert length, we determined whether the dependence on insert position seen for RecA (9) is conserved in the eukaryotic protein. We digested pBS derivatives with NgoMIV, BsaI or AflIII restriction endonuclease to generate circularly permuted dsL substrates such that the insert was positioned at the beginning (proximal), middle or end (distal), respectively, of strand transfer.
We found a dramatic position dependence for bypass of inserts in the dsL substrate that depended sharply on the insert length (Fig. 3A, lanes 1018). While bypass of 4 bp inserts showed minimal position dependence, bypass of 6 bp inserts dropped 10-fold when the insert was moved from a proximal to a distal location (Fig. 3B). Bypass of 9 bp inserts at the most distal insert position was undetected.
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In contrast, when the insert was in the same three positions in the ssC substrate, there was only a minimal position effect (Fig. 3A, lanes 19). Whereas no position effect was seen for the 4 base insert, the 6 and 9 base inserts showed slight decreases in bypass as the insert was moved closer to the position corresponding to the distal end of the dsL substrate (Fig. 3B).
The significant effect of heterology position with double-stranded inserts suggests that the need for interactions with distal homology is a conserved property between Rad51 and RecA. Interestingly, Rad51 shares with RecA a tempered position effect for single-stranded inserts (8,9).
Comparison of 5'
3' and 3'
5' heterology bypass
Rad51 is unique among known strand transfer proteins in that it can catalyze strand transfer in vitro in either the 3'
5' or 5'
3' direction. For RecA, it was believed that the unique polarity of nucleoprotein formation dictated the polarity of subsequent strand transfer (26). This cannot be the case for Rad51: either the polarity of strand transfer is independent of the polarity of polymerization or the 3'
5' and 5'
3' reactions use different mechanisms. Heterology bypass provides a sensitive assay to compare the 3'
5' and 5'
3' reactions. Because bypass is measured by comparing product formation from heterologous and homologous reactions, differences in the rate of product formation between the 3'
5' and 5'
3' reactions are controlled for.
The experiments in Figures 2 and 3 used substrates with 5'-overhangs and thus proceeded in the 3'
5' direction. To test bypass 5'
3', the transfer direction of RecA, DNAs were digested with NspI and AlwNI to generate substrates with 3'-overhangs and inserts positioned at the beginning or middle of the dsL, respectively. Both heterology length and position effects were monitored.
We found no appreciable difference between the 3'
5' and 5'
3' directions of strand transfer in either the bypass of single- and double-stranded inserts (Fig 4, compare top and bottom panels) or in the position effect (Fig 4, bottom panels, compare NspI and AlwNI to NgoMIV and BsaI). The similarity between insert length dependences can be seen readily by comparing the NgoMIV and NspI reactions that are matched for heterology position (Fig 4, black curves in the left and right panels). The interpolated insert length at which strand transfer was 50% blocked was
5 bases for these reactions, whether the insert was single- or double-stranded. We conclude that the mechanism of bypass is fundamentally the same in both directions of Rad51 strand transfer.
| DISCUSSION |
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We found that Rad51 is proficient but stringent in strand transfer through heterologies. Inserts 4 bases or base pairs long are bypassed with between 50 and 70% efficiency. Bypass quickly drops to zero at insert lengths of >9 bases. Strand transfer is 50% blocked, depending on the type and position of insert, at insert lengths between 4 and 6 bases. Rad51 is an order of magnitude more stringent than RecA but shares the position dependence of bypass efficiency.
We were impressed by the sharp transition between efficient bypass of 4 base inserts and the relatively poor bypass of 6 base inserts. A sigmoidal dependence of bypass on insert length has also been seen in studies using RecA heterology bypass, where product formation dropped sharply between distal insert lengths of 16 and 26 bases (9). There appears to be a critical heterology limit intrinsic to the strand transfer mechanism below which bypass is very efficient. Indeed, Rad51 bypass of 4 base inserts is relatively immune to position effects.
We found the difference in bypass of single-stranded and double-stranded inserts to be surprisingly small. Averaged over the five substrates used, the ratio of single-stranded insert lengths to double-stranded insert lengths where bypass was 50% blocked was only
1 bp. Perhaps the energetic penalty of freeing single-stranded insert DNA from the nucleoprotein filament, either by extrusion or by filament reorganization, is on a par with the energetic cost of denaturing and looping out the duplex insert. Studies of RecA found a much larger difference, but the cost of denaturing much longer duplex inserts could have overwhelmed the costs of other steps (8,9).
Several models have been proposed for the mechanism of heterology bypass during strand transfer (8,13,14). These models differ in detail, but all attempt to explain the requirements for ATP hydrolysis and distal homology by suggesting that the nucleoprotein filament must denature the heterology through helicase-like activity or by generating and trapping negative supercoiling. Indeed, RecA has been shown to open the duplex dramatically during strand transfer (27). Rad51 shares with RecA the relevant mechanistic requirements (this work; 19) and can also be modeled in these ways. We imagine that the stringency of Rad51 is determined by the number of base pairs that can be denatured and thus is limited by the mechanical force that Rad51 generates. Yeast Rad51 is roughly 10-fold more stringent than RecA and has been shown to hydrolyze ATP
20 times more slowly (3).
Why has the eukaryotic protein shifted its heterology tolerance towards stringency? Eukaryotic genomes have increased their sequence redundancy through evolutionary genome duplication, divergence of related genes and multiplication of transposable elements (28,29). As a result, the danger of recombinational chromosome rearrangement is much greater for even the simple yeast genome than for the E.coli genome, which has scant repetitions (30). Strand transfer proteins may have adapted to minimize this danger, increasing the accuracy of recombinational repair even while sacrificing overall recombination efficiency.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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V.F.H. is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Predoctoral Fellow. This work was supported by grants to N.R.C. from the General Medical Institute of the NIH.
| FOOTNOTES |
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* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +1 510 642 5266; Fax: +1 510 643 1079; Email: ncozzare{at}socrates.berkeley.edu Present address:Kirsten R. Benjamin, Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA
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