Abstract

During meiotic prophase, a structure called the synaptonemal complex (SC) assembles at the interface between aligned pairs of homologous chromosomes, and crossover recombination events occur between their DNA molecules. Here we investigate the inter-relationships between these two hallmark features of the meiotic program in the nematode C. elegans, revealing dynamic properties of the SC that are modulated by recombination. We demonstrate that the SC incorporates new subunits and switches from a more highly dynamic/labile state to a more stable state as germ cells progress through the pachytene stage of meiotic prophase. We further show that the more dynamic state of the SC is prolonged in mutants where meiotic recombination is impaired. Moreover, in meiotic mutants where recombination intermediates are present in limiting numbers, SC central region subunits become preferentially stabilized on the subset of chromosome pairs that harbor a site where pro-crossover factors COSA-1 and MutSγ are concentrated. Polo-like kinase PLK-2 becomes preferentially localized to the SCs of chromosome pairs harboring recombination sites prior to the enrichment of SC central region proteins on such chromosomes, and PLK-2 is required for this enrichment to occur. Further, late pachytene nuclei in a plk-2 mutant exhibit the more highly dynamic SC state. Together our data demonstrate that crossover recombination events elicit chromosome-autonomous stabilizing effects on the SC and implicate PLK-2 in this process. We discuss how this recombination-triggered modulation of SC state might contribute to regulatory mechanisms that operate during meiosis to ensure the formation of crossovers while at the same time limiting their numbers.

Highlights

  • Sexual reproduction depends on the specialized cell division program of meiosis, which allows diploid organisms to form haploid gametes

  • Reliable chromosome inheritance during sexual reproduction depends on the formation of temporary connections between homologous chromosomes that enable them to segregate toward opposite spindle poles at the meiosis I division

  • The pachytene stage of meiotic prophase is defined by the presence of synaptonemal complex along the full interface between lengthwise aligned pairs of homologous chromosomes

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Summary

Introduction

Sexual reproduction depends on the specialized cell division program of meiosis, which allows diploid organisms to form haploid gametes. We know that COs are the products of a meiosis-specific recombination program, consisting of i) the controlled introduction of DNA double strand breaks (DSBs) by the transesterase SPO-11 [3,4,5], ii) engagement of the homologous chromosome as a template for recombinational repair [6], and iii) formation and resolution of intermediates at a subset of recombination sites in a manner that yields CO products These inter-homolog COs, in conjunction with sister chromatid cohesion, form the basis of connections that allow the homologs to orient and segregate toward opposite spindle poles at meiosis I. Meiotic recombination is tightly regulated in a manner that limits that number of COs formed, yet simultaneously guarantees that every homolog pair receives at least one CO

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