Abstract

In budding yeast, an HO endonuclease-inducible double-strand break (DSB) is efficiently repaired by several homologous recombination (HR) pathways. In contrast to gene conversion (GC), where both ends of the DSB can recombine with the same template, break-induced replication (BIR) occurs when only the centromere-proximal end of the DSB can locate homologous sequences. Whereas GC results in a small patch of new DNA synthesis, BIR leads to a nonreciprocal translocation. The requirements for completing BIR are significantly different from those of GC, but both processes require 5′ to 3′ resection of DSB ends to create single-stranded DNA that leads to formation of a Rad51 filament required to initiate HR. Resection proceeds by two pathways dependent on Exo1 or the BLM homolog, Sgs1. We report that Exo1 and Sgs1 each inhibit BIR but have little effect on GC, while overexpression of either protein severely inhibits BIR. In contrast, overexpression of Rad51 markedly increases the efficiency of BIR, again with little effect on GC. In sgs1Δ exo1Δ strains, where there is little 5′ to 3′ resection, the level of BIR is not different from either single mutant; surprisingly, there is a two-fold increase in cell viability after HO induction whereby 40% of all cells survive by formation of a new telomere within a few kb of the site of DNA cleavage. De novo telomere addition is rare in wild-type, sgs1Δ, or exo1Δ cells. In sgs1Δ exo1Δ, repair by GC is severely inhibited, but cell viaiblity remains high because of new telomere formation. These data suggest that the extensive 5′ to 3′ resection that occurs before the initiation of new DNA synthesis in BIR may prevent efficient maintenance of a Rad51 filament near the DSB end. The severe constraint on 5′ to 3′ resection, which also abrogates activation of the Mec1-dependent DNA damage checkpoint, permits an unprecedented level of new telomere addition.

Highlights

  • DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are generated by normal cellular processes including DNA replication or by exposure to DNA damaging agents or ionizing radiation

  • In gene conversion (GC), both ends of the DSB share homology to an intact donor locus, and the break is repaired by copying the donor to create a small patch of new DNA synthesis

  • In break-induced replication (BIR), only one side of the DSB shares homology to a donor, and repair involves assembly of a recombination-dependent replication fork that copies sequences to the end of the template chromosome, yielding a nonreciprocal translocation

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Summary

Introduction

DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are generated by normal cellular processes including DNA replication or by exposure to DNA damaging agents or ionizing radiation. A key initial step in HR is 59 to 39 resection of DSB ends to create single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) that recruits formation of a Rad filament, which engages in a search for homologous sequences. The predominant HR pathway is gene conversion (GC), a conservative mechanism in which both ends of the DSB share homologous sequences on a sister chromatid, a homologous chromosome, or at an ectopic location. Rad51-mediated strand invasion of the 39-ended ssDNA allows the initiation of new DNA synthesis to copy a short region of the template and patch up the DSB. When only one DSB end shares homology to a template elsewhere in the genome, a less-efficient HR mechanism, breakinduced replication (BIR), can be used to repair the break [5,6]. An alternative way to repair the DSB is through de novo telomere addition through the action of telomerase [11,12,13], this is a very inefficient process that is improved by elimination of the Pif helicase [14]

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