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First published online 3 May 2005
doi: 10.1242/jcs.02362
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Research Article |
1 Department of Cell and Molecular Biology and Center for Genomics and Bioinformatics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, 171 77, Sweden
2 Department of Gene and Cell Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY 10029, USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: christer.hoog{at}cmb.ki.se)
Accepted 7 March 2005
| Summary |
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Key words: Meiosis, Synaptonemal complex, Cohesin complex proteins, Sister-chromatid cohesion
| Introduction |
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, SMC3 and RAD21 (Eijpe et al., 2000
What is the role of the mammalian AE proteins SYCP2 and SYCP3? Several experimental results suggest that these proteins are structural elements of the AE (for review, see Page and Hawley, 2004
). Ectopic production of SYCP3 in mammalian somatic-cell-culture cells gives rise to extended AE-like fibres (Yuan et al., 1998
). Furthermore, ultrastructural light-microscopy studies of Sycp3-deficient male and female germ cells have revealed a complete loss of the nuclear silver-stained filaments normally associated with the SC (Yuan et al., 2002
; Yuan et al., 2000
). SYCP3 has been shown in both male and female germ cells to be required for the recruitment of SYCP2 to the AE (Pelttari et al., 2001
; Yuan et al., 2002
). However, SYCP2 remains associated with the telomeres of male zygotene/pachytene chromosomes despite the absence of SYCP3 (Liebe et al., 2004
). Similarly, SYCP2 foci are found at the distal ends of pachytene chromosomes in Sycp3-deficient female germ cells, and approximately half the number of the foci are associated with the centromeres (Yuan, 2002). This suggests that SYCP2 also remains localized to the telomeres in Sycp3-deficient female germ cells. Despite the accumulated absence of both SYCP3 and SYCP2 from the axis of meiotic chromosomes, electron-microscopy studies have identified a residual axial core that organizes the transverse filament and the central element structures of the SC (Liebe et al., 2004
). The cohesin complex proteins SMC1, SMC3 and STAG3 have been localized to this residual axial core in male meiotic germ cells using immunocytological methods (Kolas et al., 2004
; Pelttari et al., 2001
). Following this, it has been shown that SYCP3 is required for chromosome compaction at zygotene and pachytene (Kolas et al., 2004
; Yuan et al., 2002
) but not for sister-chromatid cohesion, homologue alignment or synapsis (Liebe et al., 2004
; Yuan et al., 2002
).
The absence of SYCP3 leads to an arrest of spermatocyte development at a zygotene/pachytene-like stage of meiotic prophase I, resulting in male infertility (Yuan et al., 2000
). Remarkably, loss of SYCP3 only subtly affects female germ-cell development and fertility, demonstrating a sexually dimorphic response to the absence of this protein (Yuan et al., 2000
). Interestingly, SYCP3 and SYCP2 are produced differently during meiosis in males and females. The production of the two AE proteins is not detectable beyond the dictyate stage of female germ-cell development (Hodges et al., 2001
), whereas both proteins label the centromere regions of metaphase I (MI) chromosomes in male germ cells (Moens and Spyropoulos, 1995
; Parra et al., 2004
). Based on the localization of SYCP3 and SYCP2 to male MI chromosomes, it has been suggested that the two proteins provide centromere and kinetochore cohesion (Moens and Spyropoulos, 1995
; Parra et al., 2004
).
Here, we have used Sycp3-deficient female mice to investigate additional structural roles for SYCP3 in supporting the meiotic chromosome axis, as defined by cohesin protein localization. We have focused on the late stages of meiosis to examine further the proposed functional differences for SYCP3 and SYCP2 in male and female germ cells. We show that the axial cohesin cores prematurely disassemble in the absence of SYCP3 at the diplotene stage of female meiosis. This result supports a model in which SYCP3 has a structural role in maintaining, but not establishing, cohesin core organization. Studies of Sycp3-deficient spermatocytes show that SYCP3 is required for recruitment of SYCP2 to the centromere regions, but we find no evidence that SYCP3 or SYCP2 are required for cohesin protein distribution or centromere cohesion at the MI stage. Thus, we find no evidence for a sexually dimorphic role for SYCP3 or SYCP2 at the MI stage.
| Materials and Methods |
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-tubulin antibody (diluted 1:10,000, Sigma) detected by a donkey anti-mouse HRP-conjugated antibody (diluted 1:10,000, Jackson Immunoresearch Laboratories) (see supplementary material, Fig. S1).
Preparation of oocytes and spermatocytes
Animals heterozygous for Sycp3 (Yuan et al., 2000
) were mated to obtain oocytes at different stages of prophase I of meiosis. After genotyping (Yuan et al., 2000
) oocytes from embryonic-day 18.5 (E18.5) embryos, as well as from newborn and 4- and 7-day-old female mice were fixed in 0.8% paraformaldehyde (PFA) using a `drying-down' technique (Peters et al., 1997
). To obtain oocytes at the MI stage of meiosis ovaries from 3.5- to 4-week-old mice were dissected, and the oocytes were fixed in 1% PFA (Hodges and Hunt, 2002
). Testicular cell suspensions were resuspended in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) supplemented with 5% foetal calf serum to a density of 1x106 ml1 to 5x106 ml1, cultured with 3 µM okadaic acid (OA) at 32°C for 4 hours and fixed in 1% PFA.
Immunofluorescence microscopy
For immunolocalization of oocytes and spermatocytes, we used the following antibodies and dilutions: rabbit anti-SMC3 (Eijpe et al., 2000
), 1:25; rabbit anti-SMC4 (Bethyl Laboratories), 1:2000; rabbit anti-SYCP3 (Liu et al., 1996
), 1:50; rabbit anti-SYCP1 (Liu et al., 1996
), 1:50; human anti-CREST antiserum, 1:4000; guinea-pig anti-SYCP1, 1:400; guinea-pig anti-SYCP2, 1:100; guinea-pig anti-REC8, 1:100; guinea-pig anti-STAG3, 1:100; guinea-pig anti-SMC1ß, 1:100 (for the guinea-pig antibodies, see supplementary material, Figs S1, S2). Secondary antibodies used were: swine anti-rabbit conjugated to fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) (DAKO), 1:100; donkey anti-guinea-pig conjugated to Cy3 (Jackson Labs), 1:1000; donkey anti-guinea pig conjugated to Cy2 (Jackson Labs), 1:500; donkey-anti-mouse Cy3 (Jackson Labs), 1:1200; goat anti-human conjugated to Cy5 (Amersham), 1:2500. All slides were stained with 0.5 µg ml1 DAPI to control the quality of the fixation procedures and only cells with undisrupted morphology were analysed. After staining, cells were mounted in Prolong mounting medium (Molecular Probes). Images were captured using a Leica DMRXA microscope at 1000x magnification and a Hamamatsu C4880-40 CCD camera. Images were processed using Openlab 3.1.4 software (Improvision) and Adobe Photoshop 8.0.
Staging of the oocytes
Meiotic progression in females differs from that in males in timing and stage appearance. Staging of mouse oocytes were based on nuclear morphology (DAPI staining), centromere numbers (CREST staining) and the extent of core synapsis (SYCP1 staining). SYCP1 fibres first become visible at early zygotene and increase in size as cells progress through zygotene and homologous chromosomes pair; centromeres (CREST foci) are usually the last to pair. At pachytene, SYCP1 fibres are fully colocalized with SYCP2, SYCP3 and cohesin cores, and cells display 20 distinct CREST foci, corresponding to the paired centromeres. SYCP1 cores disappear as chromosomes desynapse at diplotene; the number of CREST foci is between 20 and 40. Unlike the previous stages, male and female diplotene differ. Spermatocytes go straight into compaction at diakinesis, whereas oocytes enter dictyate with decondensed chromatin. Meiosis in females is initiated in a synchronous manner during foetal development: most of the oocytes in both wild-type and SYCP3-null embryos at E16.5 had entered zygotene, whereas they reached pachytene and early diplotene by E18.5. All oocytes reached dictyate during the first week after birth.
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| Results |
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Premature disassembly of cohesin cores does not affect MI chromosome organization
The premature disassembly of the cohesin cores at diplotene in Sycp3/ oocytes could affect cohesin-complex distribution and functions at later meiotic stages. We therefore characterized the distribution of STAG3, REC8 and SMC1ß on MI chromosomes derived from oocytes. The localization of these meiosis-specific cohesin proteins on MI chromosomes has previously only been reported for male germ cells (Eijpe et al., 2000
; Lee et al., 2003
; Prieto et al., 2001
; Revenkova et al., 2001
). We found that STAG3, REC8 and SMC1ß localization on female Sycp3/ and wild-type MI chromosomes (Fig. 4A-P) closely followed what has been shown for male germ cells (see supplementary material, Fig. S1). We also monitored the distribution of SMC4, a condensin subunit produced in mitotic and meiotic cells that regulates chromosome condensation (Hirano, 2002) and axial compaction (Yu and Koshland, 2003
), to investigate whether SYCP3 deficiency affects the organization of this protein on mammalian meiotic chromosomes. It was found that SMC4 accumulates at the end of prophase I and then localizes to the MI chromosomes in a pattern that is indistinguishable between wild-type and Sycp3/ oocytes (Fig. 4Q-T). In addition, we score the same number of centromeres in Sycp3/ and wild-type MI oocytes (Fig. 4B,H). We conclude that the premature disassembly of the cohesin cores at diplotene in Sycp3/ oocytes does not affect the distribution of the condensin subunit SMC4 or cohesin complex proteins along MI chromosomes, or centromere cohesion.
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| Discussion |
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Absence of SYCP3 in spermatocytes does not affect cohesin protein localization or cohesion between sister centromeres or kinetochores at MI
We have shown that the absence of SYCP2 and SYCP3 from the meiotic chromosome axis during female meiotic prophase does not have a detectable effect on cohesin protein distribution or centromere cohesion at MI. Similarly, `MI' chromosomes derived from wild-type or SYCP3-deficient spermatocytes by OA treatment did not exhibit differences in sister-chromatid centromere/kinetochore cohesion, or in cohesin protein localization along the chromosomes. We found, however, that SYCP2 required SYCP3 in order to associate with the centromere region of MI chromosomes in male germ cells. The fact that SYCP3 and SYCP2 are not produced beyond the dictyate stage of female meiosis, together with the absence of a detectable cohesion defects in male MI cells in the absence of SYCP3 and SYCP2, strongly questions the proposals that these two proteins are essential for centromere or kinetochore cohesion at the MI stage in male germ cells (Moens and Spyropoulos, 1995
; Parra et al., 2004
). Our results do not support a sexually dimorphic role for SYCP3 and SYCP2 at meiotic MI.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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