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. 2010 May 13;6(5):e1000948. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1000948

Defective Resection at DNA Double-Strand Breaks Leads to De Novo Telomere Formation and Enhances Gene Targeting

Woo-Hyun Chung 1, Zhu Zhu 1, Alma Papusha 1, Anna Malkova 2, Grzegorz Ira 1,*
Editor: Michael Lichten3
PMCID: PMC2869328  PMID: 20485519

Abstract

The formation of single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) at double-strand break (DSB) ends is essential in repair by homologous recombination and is mediated by DNA helicases and nucleases. Here we estimated the length of ssDNA generated during DSB repair and analyzed the consequences of elimination of processive resection pathways mediated by Sgs1 helicase and Exo1 nuclease on DSB repair fidelity. In wild-type cells during allelic gene conversion, an average of 2–4 kb of ssDNA accumulates at each side of the break. Longer ssDNA is formed during ectopic recombination or break-induced replication (BIR), reflecting much slower repair kinetics. This relatively extensive resection may help determine sequences involved in homology search and prevent recombination within short DNA repeats next to the break. In sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutants that form only very short ssDNA, allelic gene conversion decreases 5-fold and DSBs are repaired by BIR or de novo telomere formation resulting in loss of heterozygosity. The absence of the telomerase inhibitor, PIF1, increases de novo telomere pathway usage to about 50%. Accumulation of Cdc13, a protein recruiting telomerase, at the break site increases in sgs1Δ exo1Δ, and the requirement of the Ku complex for new telomere formation is partially bypassed. In contrast to this decreased and alternative DSB repair, the efficiency and accuracy of gene targeting increases dramatically in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells, suggesting that transformed DNA is very stable in these mutants. Altogether these data establish a new role for processive resection in the fidelity of DSB repair.

Author Summary

Chromosomal breaks occur spontaneously or are induced by ionizing radiation and many chemotherapeutic drugs. DNA double-strand breaks are processed by nucleases and helicases in yeast and human to generate single-stranded DNA that is then used for repair by recombination with homologous chromosome. Single-stranded DNA at chromosomal breaks also constitutes a signal for cells to arrest cell cycle progression until the DNA damage is repaired. This study examines the consequences of elimination of enzymes that process chromosomal breaks to single-stranded DNA on the fidelity of repair and genome stability in the model organism yeast. Mutants deficient in these enzymes often fail to repair the breaks by homologous recombination and instead add new telomeres at the breaks. Formation of new telomeres is associated with partial loss of the chromosome arm distal from the break. Such chromosomal aberrations were frequently observed in tumor cells and are responsible for about 10% of human genomic disorders resulting from chromosomal abnormalities. We also observed that elimination of enzymes that process chromosomal breaks into single-stranded DNA greatly stimulates genome manipulation by gene targeting, suggesting that transformed DNA is also a substrate for degradation by these enzymes. We discuss the possibility of using a similar approach in mammalian cells where gene targeting is inaccurate and less efficient when compared to yeast.

Introduction

Homologous recombination is a major mechanism of repair of both DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) and gaps that occur spontaneously or are induced by endonucleases, radiation or radiomimetic agents. Most of the enzymes involved in recombination are conserved among bacteria, yeast and human [reviewed in [1], [2]]. A key protein in recombination called Rad51 mediates DNA strand exchange between a damaged DNA molecule and a homologous intact DNA template. Rad51 forms a nucleoprotein filament on 3′ single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) that is capable of a genome-wide search for a homologous template sequence and subsequent strand invasion. Upon strand invasion, 3′ ends initiate new DNA synthesis that allows recovery of lost information at the site of the DSB. Subsequent resolution of the recombining molecules forms a final product that in mitotic cells typically is a noncrossover.

A necessary prerequisite of Rad51 filaments is the formation of 3′ ssDNA tails at DNA breaks. In budding yeast, the Mre11/Rad50/Xrs2 (MRX) complex together with Sae2 is responsible for the initiation of resection while two nucleases, Exo1 and Dna2 together with the Sgs1/Top3/Rmi1 (STR) complex form long ssDNA at DSBs [3], [4], [5]. Similar pathways of resection operate at yeast telomeres [6]. A two step mechanism in which mre11 and rad50 homologues play an initial role has also been described in the archeal organism Pyrococcus furiosus [7]. Human orthologs of these proteins, Mre11-Rad50-Nbs1 (MRN) with CtIP, Exo1 and BLM, play similar roles in 5′ strand resection [3], [8], [9]. In Xenopus laevis, Dna2 also processes DSB ends [10]. Human Dna2 has an important role in the maintenance of mitochondrial DNA [11], yet its nuclear role remains to be determined [12].

Resection of the 5′ strand is highly regulated by DNA damage checkpoint proteins, chromatin remodeling factors and cyclin-dependent kinase. DNA damage checkpoint proteins exhibit complex interactions with enzymes involved in resection because they both stimulate and later limit resection [[13] and reviewed in [14], [15]]. Cell cycle control of resection influences the choice between DSB repair pathways: nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) or homologous recombination (HR) [16], [17], [18]. The extent of resection at DSBs is clearly regulated. However, how resection proceeds during DSB repair and the consequences of excess or limited resection on the fidelity of repair are not known.

Most estimations of end resection in yeast were made using DSBs generated by either the HO or I-SceI endonucleases that cannot be repaired by gene conversion because homologous sequences are deleted [e.g. [19], [20]]. Resection of such breaks is unlimited and proceeds at about 4 kb per hour. An alternative approach used to study resection utilized single strand annealing (SSA), a repair process relying on extensive resection and annealing between distant direct DNA repeats [e.g. [21]]. While these assays were very useful in identifying proteins involved in resection it remains unknown how resection proceeds when the break is being repaired by the most natural pathway, gene conversion. It is important to examine the resection at DSBs that are repaired normally because resection determines sequences that are used for homology search and repair. Here for the first time, we estimated the length of ssDNA generated during DSB repair using several assays with different kinetics of repair - allelic and ectopic gene conversion and break-induced replication (BIR). We demonstrate that about 2 to over 10 kb of ssDNA is generated depending on the kinetics of repair. Secondly, we determined the role of resection in the fidelity of DSB repair and gene targeting. Using mutants exhibiting decreased rates of resection we show that the length of 3′ tails defines the sequences involved in homology search and recombination donor choice. We demonstrate that normal resection at a DSB prevents deleterious repair via de novo telomere addition. Finally, we show that decreased resection was accompanied by dramatic increases in both the accuracy and efficiency of gene targeting. Together these results uncover a new role for resection in the regulation of DSB repair pathways.

Results

3–6 kb of ssDNA accumulates at DSB ends during ectopic recombination

Formation of ssDNA at DSB ends was extensively studied in multiple assays where the DSB was unrepairable. These assays were very useful in identifying enzymes involved in resection, however DSBs are normally repaired quickly by homologous recombination. Here for the first time we examined the kinetics and size of ssDNA generated at DSBs repaired by gene conversion and investigated the fidelity of DSB repair in mutants with limited resection. First, we measured ssDNA at a DSB repaired by an ectopic recombination assay in haploid cells where HO endonuclease induces a break within a MAT a sequence inserted at the ARG5,6 locus on chromosome V (Figure 1A) [22]. This MAT a sequence shares 1.9 kb (1.4 kb proximal and 0.5 kb distal from the HO break) homology with MAT a-inc on chromosome III. MAT a-inc carries a point mutation in the HO recognition site that prevents HO cleavage. The DSB induced at MAT a locus is processed to form 3′ ssDNA tails that invade a homologous template MAT a-inc sequence located on chromosome III and initiate new DNA synthesis. Within one hour of HO nuclease induction a DSB occurred in all cells and the subsequent repair of the DSB takes about 3 to 7 hours in wild-type cells (Figure 1B) [22]. In this assay as well as in all other assays presented in this work, HO induction is continuous, therefore when the break is repaired by nonhomologous end joining, HO endonuclease cuts the MAT sequence again. We determined the amount of ssDNA generated during repair by following the temporary loss of several EcoRI restriction enzyme cleavage sites in the vicinity of the DSB as previously described (Zhu et al. 2008). Our goal was to find the distance from the HO cut site where at least half of the cell population removes the 5′ strand during repair. We used 4 probes that detect resection beyond 0.9 kb, 3.3 kb, 6.5 kb, and 17.3 kb from the break. As shown in Figure 1B, at least 70% of cells degraded DNA beyond 0.9 kb from the DSB ends and about half of the cell population degraded the 5′ strand beyond 3.3 kb from the DSB ends. Only 85% of cells repaired the break, therefore degradation of the 5′ strand beyond 17.3 kb from the HO cut site likely results from resection in cells that did not repair the break. Unrepaired breaks continue to be resected for at least 36 hours [[5] and data not shown]. The maximum amount of ssDNA at the DSB is observed at the time when the first recombination product starts to accumulate at 3 hours after HO endonuclease induction. To confirm that resection rate at the DSB induced on chromosome V is comparable to our previous estimation on chromosome III, we measured the resection in a strain lacking an essential protein for gene conversion, Rad51. As in wild-type cells, an HO break was induced in all cells within one hour (Figure 1C). Resection was measured 3.3 and 17.3 kb distal to the DSB in rad51Δ mutant cells (Figure 1C). The average rate of resection was 3.6 kb/hr, which is very similar to the rates determined in donorless wild-type and rad51Δ strains at the MAT locus on chromosome III [5]. A similar rate of resection was previously estimated at several loci on different chromosomes and on a plasmid substrate [20], [21], [23]. We concluded that the locus we used to measure resection during repair is representative and that half of the cell population resected at least 3–6 kb of the 5′ strand on one DSB end during repair. Given that 3′ ends are stable for several hours following break induction [20], [21] this is presumably the average amount of ssDNA that is active in the search for homologous sequences in this ectopic recombination assay. This amount of ssDNA is several times more than the homologous sequence available (0.5 kb). It is therefore probable that more ssDNA is formed than is required for repair. However this extensive resection may help to maintain DNA damage checkpoint arrest and give cells the necessary time for repair.

Figure 1. Measurement of resection in DSB–induced ectopic recombination.

Figure 1

(A) Schematic representation of the ectopic recombination assay between MAT a on chromosome V and MAT a-inc on chromosome III. Positions of EcoRI sites (E) and DNA probes used for hybridization with respect to the HO recognition site on chromosome V are shown (tGI354). MAT a and MAT a-inc share 1.9 kb of homology in total. (B) Plot showing the percentage of unprocessed 5′ strand for each EcoRI site and the corresponding Southern blots are shown. Kinetics of DSB repair product formation is indicated by the red line. Plotted values are the mean values ±SD from three independent experiments. (C) 5′ strand processing was monitored and plotted from an ectopic recombination assay in rad51Δ cells (tGI379) as in (B).

The length of ssDNA at the DSBs depends on the kinetics of repair

Normally DSB repair occurs with a fully homologous template molecule such as a sister chromatid or homologous chromosome. We therefore also estimated the amount of ssDNA generated during allelic recombination where the break is induced at the MAT a locus on chromosome III and is repaired by homologous recombination with a MATα-inc sequence on a homologous chromosome III (Figure 2A). Allelic recombination is faster than ectopic as it is completed within 2 to 4 hours (Figure 2B and Figure S1). Faster kinetics of allelic recombination in diploid cells when compared to ectopic recombination in haploid cells is not due to MAT a/α heterozygosity. We previously demonstrated that ectopic recombination in MAT a/α heterozygous haploid cells and in MAT a haploid cells is equally slow [22]. Also resection rate in haploid and diploid cells is the same (Figure S2). The maximum amount of ssDNA during allelic recombination accumulates at 2 hours after break induction (Figure 2B). We measured resection beyond 1.2 kb, 2.6 kb, 3.8 kb, 5.0 and 10.2 kb from the DSB ends (Figure 2B). Southern blots for each probe used in this assay are shown in Figure S1. At least half of the cells resected DSB ends beyond 1.2 kb and 2.6 kb from the DSB and only 20% beyond 5.0 kb. These are significantly shorter sizes of ssDNA than in ectopic recombination. Interestingly, a small fraction of cells (10%) resected beyond 10.2 kb of ssDNA, suggesting that sometimes sequences far away from DSB ends can be active in the homology search even during fast allelic recombination. We think that during gene conversion most of the detected ssDNA is formed prior to strand invasion and is likely active in search for homologous sequence because new DNA synthesis and final product occurs 1.5–3 hours after DSB formation and only 20 minutes after strand invasion (Figure 1 and Figure 2; [24] and J. Haber, personal communication).

Figure 2. Kinetics of repair determine the amount of ssDNA during DSB repair.

Figure 2

(A) Schematic representation of the allelic recombination assay between MAT a and MATα-inc loci on chromosome III. Positions of EcoRI (E) and HindIII (H) sites and DNA probes used for Southern hybridization to analyze 5′ strand processing with respect to the HO recognition site are shown (yGI234). (B) Plot showing the percentage of unprocessed 5′ strand for each restriction site. Plotted values are the mean values ±SD from three independent experiments. Kinetics of DSB repair is indicated by the red line. (C) Schematic diagram of the BIR assay used for resection analysis. (D) 5′ strand processing was analyzed in the BIR repair strain (AM1003) as described in (B).

The third assay we used to measure resection was break-induced replication (BIR) where only one DSB end is homologous to the template DNA and, after strand invasion, the 3′ end is extended to copy the chromosome to its very end (Figure 2C) [25]. In this assay the break is induced at the MAT a locus, identical to the allelic recombination assay investigated above. It is a slow repair pathway as it takes about 6 to 10 hours to see the recombination product (Figure S3) [25]. The slow kinetics of initial DNA synthesis in BIR is not caused by terminal nonhomology, because BIR is equally slow even when the DSB end is perfectly homologous with its template [25].We measured 5′ strand resection in the BIR assay at 2.6 kb, 15.5 kb and 27.5 kb from the DSB end (Figure 2C). Southern blots for all probes used for this assay are shown in Figure S3. As shown in Figure 2D, most cells resected the 5′ strand beyond 2.6 kb and about half of the cell population resected DSB ends beyond 15.5 kb from the break. No significant resection was observed beyond 27.5 kb from the cut site. BIR is distinct from gene conversion because strand invasion in BIR monitored by Rad51 recruitment (ChIP) to template DNA, occurs with kinetics similar to gene conversion (Jain et. all, 2009) while new DNA synthesis is detectable only 2–3 hours after strand invasion. Therefore the very long ssDNA created during BIR suggests that resection continues after strand invasion but before new DNA synthesis. Altogether we conclude that the amount of ssDNA created during repair depends on the kinetics of repair and secondly that resection, at least in BIR assay, continues after strand invasion and probably helps to maintain DNA damage checkpoint arrest until new DNA synthesis and final repair product forms.

Resection determines the sequences involved in homology search and donor choice

An implicit idea in current models of homologous recombination is that ssDNA determines sequences used for the homologous template search [26]. Now that we have verified the amount of ssDNA at DSBs, and the enzymes involved in resection are known, allowing us to manipulate the rate of ssDNA formation, we decided to verify this general concept. As shown above, an average of at least several kb of ssDNA is generated on one side of the break, which is much greater than the minimum homology required for efficient DSB repair. In DSB-induced recombination there is no difference in the efficiency of repair when homology is increased above 250 bp on each side of the break in a chromosomal context [27] and above 80 bp in a plasmid context [28]. Moreover, in yeast mating-type switching where an HO-induced break at the MAT locus is very efficiently repaired by recombination with the HMR and HML templates, the homology is limited to a few hundred base pairs [29]. Therefore, the length of ssDNA generated during resection at a DSB is greater than the minimum amount of sequence needed for efficient homology search and repair. It is possible that the formation of long ssDNA tails at DSBs increases the fidelity of repair by activating longer sequences in the homology search. Indeed, previously it was demonstrated that sequences located further away from the break are used for homology search preferentially over sequences within the first 0.5 kb from the break [30]. To verify whether resection determines the sequences involved in homology search and impacts template sequence choice we used a competition assay designed by Inbar and Kupiec [30]. In this assay, an HO break is induced on chromosome II at a ura3 sequence that was inserted in the middle of the LYS2 gene. A DSB at this site can be repaired by recombination with one of two homologous template sequences, URA3 located on chromosome V or LYS2 located on chromosome XV (Figure 3A). The total homology between ura3 sequences is 1.1 kb and between lys2 sequences is 4.9 kb. In agreement with the original report [30] we observed that lys2 sequences that are further from the break are used preferentially as a recombination template. Only about 20±3% of wild-type cells repair the DSB by recombination with the URA3 donor sequence. Given that during ectopic recombination an average of 3–6 kb of ssDNA accumulates at both sides of a DSB (Figure 1B), it is likely that LYS2 sequences are used 4 times more often than URA3 simply because they are 4 times longer. With the average rate of resection of 4 kb/hr, ura3 sequences are resected within 7–8 minutes and lys2 sequences are completely resected within an additional 30–40 minutes after DSB formation. When URA3 sequences were increased to match the LYS2 length, both templates were used with almost equal frequency [30]. Here we tested whether additional copies of URA3 on centromeric or multicopy plasmids could influence the donor choice. As previously demonstrated, plasmid DNA can be efficiently used for repair of chromosomal DSBs [28]. When an additional URA3 sequence was provided on a centromeric plasmid we did not observe any change in donor choice (data not shown). However, the presence of a multicopy plasmid (2μ) carrying URA3 sequences increased URA3 sequence usage for DSB repair to 55% (Figure 3B). This result suggests that sequences further away from the break are used often as a template for repair even if short sequences close to the break have multiple copies of intact templates. Another conclusion is that long Rad51 nucleofilaments have a higher chance of identifying single homologous sequence than short nucleofilaments even when multiple homologous sequences are available. This feature of homology search may inhibit recombination between short repeats. Finally, when both processive resection pathways dependent on Sgs1 and Exo1 were eliminated, URA3 was almost the only donor used for repair (>95%) demonstrating that the ssDNA exposed during resection determines the sequences involved in homology search (Figure 3B and 3C). The viability of wild-type cells and of sgs1Δ or exo1Δ single mutants was comparable, while in the double mutant sgs1Δ exo1Δ, repair by gene conversion and viability are decreased to ∼11%. Altogether our data suggest that resection activates long stretches of ssDNA in the homology search and plays an important role in the choice of donor sequences.

Figure 3. Resection at DSB ends determines the choice of recombination donor.

Figure 3

(A) Schematic diagram of the competition assay used to determine whether sequences immediately next to the break (ura3) or sequences farther from the break (lys2) were used during gene conversion [30]. Details of the assay are described in the text. Sequence sizes are in kilobase pairs. (B) Southern blotting analysis of the competition gene conversion assay shown in (A). The LYS2 gene was used as a probe. The positions of two gene conversion products called GC-ura3 and GC-LYS2 are indicated. (C) Frequencies of the choice of the ura3::HOcs-inc donor for DSB repair measured at 24 hr timepoint as the density of the band corresponding to the GC-ura3 product divided by the combined density of both GC-ura3 and GC-LYS2 products in different mutants are shown in the table.

de novo telomere addition is a frequent pathway of DSB repair in resection-deficient sgs1 Δ exo1 Δ mutants

We previously found that decreased resection in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells leads to a partial deficiency in homologous recombination. In haploid cells it is not possible to follow the fate of broken unrepaired chromosomes because these cells die due to the loss of essential genes upon resection and missegregation of the acentric part of the chromosome. To verify the fate of broken chromosomes where the breaks are very poorly resected, we used a disomic strain that carries a second truncated copy of chromosome III with the HO break site close to its end (Figure 4A). In this assay most wild-type cells repair the break by BIR (82%), a small fraction of cells can repair the break by gene conversion (13%) using very short homology (46 bp) distal to the DSB, and the frequency of chromosome loss is only 4% (Figure 4B). These cells survive normally even when the DSB is not repaired because there is second copy of chromosome III that is not cut. The efficiency of repair was estimated by plating wild-type, sgs1Δ, exo1Δ and sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells on YEPGal plates and replica-plating the grown colonies onto plates lacking adenine or leucine. In exo1Δ and sgs1Δ single mutants, there was a slight increase of chromosome loss and gene conversion at the expense of BIR consistent with a previous report (Figure 4B) [31]. In sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells, DSB repair efficiency unexpectedly is comparable to wild-type cells and most cells maintain the chromosome that was cut by HO endonuclease. Importantly, Ade+ colonies are not sectored, indicating that the chromosome that was cut by HO endonuclease is maintained well for generations. Previous estimations of DSB repair by gene conversion in sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant haploid cells showed a decrease by half or more [4], [5]. To make sure that the Ade+ Leu colonies correspond to repair by BIR, we verified the size of 27 individual repair products from Ade+ Leu colonies using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and subsequent probing with an ADE1 probe. We observed that all cells have products corresponding to the expected BIR repair product size, however 10 out of 27 have an additional product or several products similar in size to the initial chromosome III or slightly shorter. Examples of these products are shown in Figure 4C. Short chromosome products correspond to 9% of total products from 27 Ade+ Leu colonies as measured by the relative band intensities of all the repair products. The presence of two or more products, often observed as bands with different intensities, suggested that the repair process occurred after cells divided or that the two sister chromatids were repaired by different pathways. As previously demonstrated, sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells are deficient in the damage checkpoint response [3], [5], and because DSB ends are not processed normally in these cells, a broken chromosome is not lost but instead cells divide with the damaged chromosome that eventually is repaired. To check whether these repair products are within the same cell or in independent cells we streaked several Ade+ Leu colonies for single cells and further analyzed five such newly grown individual colonies for their repair products. In this case only either a BIR product or a single short product was observed (Figure 4C). The alternative products are very similar in size to the cut chromosome III, suggesting that they arose by de novo telomere formation. To verify this, we sequenced short chromosome ends and confirmed new telomere formation mostly within the first 5 kb from the DSB (Figure 5A and 5B). Rarely telomeres were added at a distance of over 10 kb away from the break, suggesting that even in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells the broken chromosome is eventually degraded and telomeres are added far from the HO break site. The 3′ ends are stable only for several hours and later are degraded [20]. Therefore, it is likely that both strands of unprotected ends are eventually degraded in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells and telomeres can be added further away from the break. Examples of sequences where de novo telomeres were formed are shown in Figure 5A and 5B. Most telomeres were added at short 1–5 GT-rich sequences, a characteristic similar to spontaneous telomere formation [32]. Therefore, slow resection greatly stimulates de novo telomere formation, but does not change the sequence preference where telomeres are added. Importantly, we verified 30 Ade+ Leu colonies in sgs1Δ exo1Δ single mutant and in wild-type cells and did not observe any short de novo telomere products (data not shown) suggesting that these enzymes have a redundant function in inhibiting de novo telomere formation at DSBs likely related to their role in resection.

Figure 4. De novo telomeres are frequently formed at poorly processed DSB ends.

Figure 4

(A) Schematic diagram showing chromosome structure of the disomic strain (AM1003) that carries an original chromosome III (350 kb) and a fragmented chromosome III (215 kb). Sequences distal to the HO recognition site were replaced by the LEU2 gene and telomere sequences as described [25]. Three major pathways of repair with their respective product sizes are shown: BIR, gene conversion and de novo telomere addition (NT). Products can be distinguished by markers and/or by sizes on PFGE gels. (B) Frequency of DSB repair by BIR and gene conversion in the AM1003 strain and its derivatives is shown in the table. (C) PFGE analysis of products from Ade+ Leu colonies exo1Δ sgs1Δ, (D) pif1-m2 exo1Δ sgs1Δ, (E) pif1-m2 med1Δ sml1Δ (F) pif1-m2 and (G) pif1-m2 exo1Δ sgs1Δ yku70Δ mutant strains. To separate BIR repair products and telomere-added products (NT) in the exo1Δ sgs1Δ strain (C) originating from one survivor we streaked single colonies on YEPD plates and analyzed products from individual colonies by subsequent PFGE. Genomic DNA of products repaired by de novo telomere addition was purified and used for sequencing to identify telomere addition sites [(C,D) and Figure 5]. “0” indicates control with no break induction. Position of chromosome I (Chr.I) that carries ade1–1 allele and is detected with ADE1 probe is shown.

Figure 5. Analysis of telomere formation in exo1Δ sgs1Δ mutants.

Figure 5

(A) The positions of new telomere addition in 14 products from exo1Δ sgs1Δ (5 triangles) and pif1-m2 exo1Δ sgs1Δ (9 circles) cells were determined by sequencing. (B) Exact position and sequence where telomeres were added is presented in the table. (C) ChIP analysis of Cdc13-13Myc binding to the region flanking the DSB was conducted in wild-type, pif1-m2, exo1Δ sgs1Δ and pif1-m2 exo1Δ sgs1Δ strains using polyclonal anti-myc antiserum. Samples were collected before and 8 h after DSB induction. Immunoprecipitated DNAs were amplified by qPCR using primer pairs to amplify a region located about 1 kb away from the HO break site. The 8 h time point IP values were normalized to the time 0 samples to yield the fold-IP values plotted on the Y-axis for the wild-type and each mutant strain. Error bars represent one standard error of the mean for three independent experiments.

New telomere formation during allelic recombination in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells

In the BIR assay we described above, the HO break is close to a chromosome end that could stimulate telomere formation in cells with poor resection. To test whether proximity to telomeres affects new telomere formation in resection deficient cells, we used a diploid sgs1Δ/sgs1Δ exo1Δ/exo1Δ strain to carry out an allelic recombination assay between two chromosomes III identical to the one used for resection verification (Figure 2A). Here the break is induced at the MAT a locus in the middle of the chromosome. The proximal and distal parts of the chromosome that is cut by HO endonuclease has ADE1 and THR4 markers, respectively, that allowed us to follow product formation on minimal media plates (Figure S4). 19% of cells repair the break by gene conversion (Ade+ Thr+) and only 2% show chromosome loss (Ade Thr). The lower level of gene conversion in this assay compared to the ectopic recombination assay between MAT a and MAT a-inc [5] likely results from the necessity for resection of a 0.7 kb long Ya sequence during allelic recombination between MAT a and MATα-inc. The rest of the cells maintained the ADE1-marked centromeric part of the chromosome that could correspond to either BIR or de novo telomere addition. To distinguish between these repair pathways, we analyzed products from 29 Ade+ Thr colonies by PFGE and again observed a dramatic increase in new telomere formation at the DSB sites. All tested Ade+ Thr colonies contained BIR products and 6 out of these (∼20%) also contained de novo telomere products (Figure S4). Therefore, slow resection stimulates de novo telomere formation even when the break is in the middle of the chromosome. In a similar study at the same locus in rad52Δ mutant cells that simply cannot repair a DSB but resect normally, de novo telomeres are not formed unless long telomere seeding sequences are provided [33]. Altogether these data suggest that slowly processed DSB ends gain features that predispose them to form de novo telomeres.

Resection and Pif1 independently suppress de novo telomere formation at DSBs

Pif1 is a major telomerase inhibitor in budding yeast [34]. In pif1Δ mutants, telomeres are longer and new telomeres are formed more frequently at spontaneous and induced chromosomal breaks [[35], [36], [37]; reviewed in [38]]. Interestingly, Pif1 was shown recently to be phosphorylated upon DNA damage in a Mec1-Rad53-Dun1-dependent manner and this phosphorylation is needed for Pif1 to inhibit de novo telomere formation [39]. Previously, we and others demonstrated that during G2/M DNA damage checkpoint arrest, Mec1/Ddc2 recruitment and Rad53 phosphorylation are partially defective in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells [3],[5]. Therefore, we thought that increased de novo telomere formation in sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant cells could be due to poor damage checkpoint activation and lack of phosphorylated Pif1 [39]. To explore this possibility, we tested whether the frequent de novo telomere formation phenotypes observed in both sgs1Δ exo1Δ and pif1Δ mutants are epistatic. We examined DSB repair products in pif1-m2 and pif1-m2 sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant cells. The pif1-m2 mutation eliminates the nuclear form of Pif1 while mitochondrial Pif1 is still present [37]. Surprisingly, we found that pif1-m2 single mutants are defective in BIR, as only half of the colonies retain growth on ade- plates (Figure 4B). The detailed analysis of Pif1's role in BIR will be presented elsewhere (W.H.C. and G.I., data not shown). Here we analyzed repair products from 30 individual Ade+ Leu colonies of pif1-m2 sgs1Δ exo1Δ triple mutant cells and 60 individual Ade+ Leu colonies of pif1-m2 mutant cells (Figure 4D and 4F, and data not shown). Only 1 out of 60 Ade+ Leu products from pif1-m2 cells showed repair by de novo telomere formation (Figure 4F). However, in pif1-m2 sgs1Δ exo1Δ triple mutants almost all (29/30) products contained either BIR and de novo telomere or just de novo telomere products (Figure 4D). De novo telomere products constituted 53% of all products from Ade+ Leu colonies as measured by the intensity of the bands corresponding to the BIR and de novo telomere products. In pif1-m2 sgs1Δ exo1Δ triple mutants, we observed much better maintenance of the broken chromosome when compared to pif1-m2 cells (Figure 4B), however this increase in Ade+ colonies turned out to correspond to repair via new telomere addition. Similar results we obtained in pif1-4A sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant where pif1 phosphorylation mutant protein was defective in inhibiting new telomere formation at DNA breaks [39]. In pif1-4A sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant 19 out of 20 products from Ade+ Leu colonies formed new telomeres (data not shown). In conclusion these results demonstrate that Pif1 actively suppresses new telomere formation even in cells that are partially defective in the DNA damage checkpoint response. We sequenced the ends of de novo telomeres in pif1-m2 sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant cells and showed that most of them are formed within the first 1 kb from the DSB, which are even closer than those observed in sgs1Δ exo1Δ double mutant cells (Figure 5A and 5B). In triple pif1-m2 sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutants, there is no further decrease in resection when compared to sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells (Figure S5), indicating that Sgs1/Exo1 and Pif1 independently and in different way suppress de novo telomere formation at DSB ends.

Analysis of new telomere formation at DSBs in checkpoint deficient cells

In sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant cells, checkpoint response in response to a single DSB is decreased [3], [5]. Therefore one possible reason for the very high rate of new telomere formation observed in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells is the decreased damage checkpoint response. However we clearly demonstrated in the section above that Pif1, which needs to be phosphorylated by Mec1 in order to inhibit new telomere formation, is still active in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells. To examine further whether decreased checkpoint response in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells is exclusively responsible for the very high level of new telomere formation, we tested DSB repair (BIR assay) in rad24Δ and rad9Δ mutants that are damage checkpoint deficient. Again we analyzed 20 products from Ade+ Leu colonies from each mutant by PFGE. We found only 1 out 40 products in rad24Δ corresponds to new telomere formation (data not shown). Further we constructed a triple mutant mec1Δ sml1Δ pif1-m2 and again analyzed the frequency of new telomere formation. We found only 5 out of 30 products correspond to new telomere formation (Figure 4E), which is significantly more than in pif1-m2 but also much less than in sgs1Δ exo1Δ pif1-m2 where almost all Ade+ Leu colonies contained new telomere products. Together these data suggest that checkpoint deficiency in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells alone does not explain the very high rate of new telomere formation, and points towards resection as an important factor.

Slow resection stimulates recruitment of Cdc13 and partially bypasses the Ku complex requirement for de novo telomere formation

Telomerase is recruited to single-stranded overhangs at the ends of chromosomes via Cdc13 and the Ku complex [reviewed in [40]]. Both proteins are needed for de novo telomere formation at DSBs [36], [41]. Deletion of YKU70/80 almost completely suppresses the increased de novo telomere formation observed in pif1Δ cells [36]. Another function of Ku at telomeres is protection from nucleases [42], [43], [44]. In sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells, DSB ends are processed minimally and so the function of the Ku complex is presumably limited to telomerase recruitment. To test whether slow resection at DSBs bypasses the need for Ku in de novo telomere formation, we constructed the quadruple mutant pif1-m2 sgs1Δ exo1Δ yku70Δ and measured the frequency of de novo telomere formation at DSB ends. As shown in Figure 4G, most of the DSBs still lead to de novo telomere formation (22/29), however the total intensity of new telomere products dropped to 15% compared to 53% observed in pif1-m2 sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells. Similarly in sgs1Δ exo1Δ yku70Δ cells we observed a relatively high number of new telomere formation (10 out of 40 products) comparable to sgs1Δ exo1Δ. However, the intensity of new telomere product was again reduced (data not shown). Therefore, slow resection exhibited by sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutants partially suppresses the need for the Ku complex in de novo telomere addition at DSBs. The Ku complex plays the opposite role of Sgs1 and Exo1 as it protects DNA ends from degradation. Because in the absence of resecting enzymes Ku becomes partially dispensable for new telomere formation, we propose that the role of Sgs1 and Exo1 specifically in resection, rather than other functions of these enzymes, is important in preventing new telomere formation at DSBs.

Cdc13 was shown to be recruited to a DSB in the middle of a chromosome even in wild-type cells where telomeres are not formed [45]. To verify whether Cdc13 recruitment is stimulated at poorly resected DSB ends we performed chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) with Myc-tagged Cdc13 in wild-type, pif1-m2, sgs1Δ exo1Δ and pif1-m2 sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant cells. We measured Cdc13 recruitment before HO break induction and 8 hours after break induction when significant BIR products start to accumulate [25]. As shown in Figure 5C, recruitment of Cdc13 increased at 8 hr after break induction in sgs1Δ exo1Δ and pif1-m2 sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells about 3- to 6-fold relative to wild-type cells. These results suggest that slow resection results in higher or longer lasting recruitment of Cdc13 that may then stimulate de novo telomere formation.

Gene targeting efficiency and accuracy increase dramatically in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells

While constructing additional gene deletions in sgs1Δ exo1Δ strain we observed that gene targeting in sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutants was surprisingly very efficient. This is in contrast to a general decrease in DSB-induced recombination which we tested in the different assays described above. We attempted to delete several genes in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells and in each case gene targeting was highly efficient. For example, deletion of ygr042w ORF with ygr042w::KanMX cassette was 140-fold higher in sgs1Δ exo1Δ than in wild-type cells. To examine more carefully the efficiency of gene targeting we transformed a thr4::URA3 cassette containing 1.1 SmaI-HindIII URA3 fragment into ura3–52 wild-type cells, and derivative sgs1Δ, exo1Δ, dna2Δ pif1-m2 and sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant cells and determined the amount of Ura+ and Ura+ Thr colonies. We further normalized the level of Ura+ colonies to the plating efficiency of each strain and compared the efficiency of gene targeting in wild-type and mutant cells. As shown in Figure 6A, the targeting efficiency increased in all single mutants, by 3- to 4-fold in the absence of Sgs1 or Dna2 and over 30-fold in the absence of Exo1, relative to wild-type cells. Strikingly, when both Sgs1 and Exo1 are absent the efficiency of targeting increases over 600-fold. It is likely that in the absence of enzymes which process DSB ends the stability of transformed DNA is increased and therefore gene targeting is more efficient. We also measured the accuracy of targeting among over 200 Ura+ colonies and observed that in sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant cells almost all targeting events are accurate (99%), which is significantly higher than in wild-type cells (72.2%; p<0.05). It is possible that in wild-type cells quick degradation of the 5′ strands exposes the URA3 marker sequence of the targeting cassette and activates it in a homology search that leads to integration at a locus other than THR4. The strain we transformed was ura3–52, therefore one possibility was that the thr4:: URA3 cassette was integrated at ura3–52 locus. To test this possibility we transformed the same thr4:: URA3 cassette into the strain where the entire URA3 ORF was deleted [46]. In this strain, the URA3 marker within the cassette shared no homology with the genome. However, again we observed that only 78% of gene targeting was accurate. Therefore inaccurate integration is not caused by resection reaching URA3 sequences within cassette that stimulates integration at the ura3–52 locus. However it is still possible that marker sequence within the cassette can, when resected, inhibit accurate integration. The accuracy of gene targeting rose from 72% to 87% or 95% when we increased the flanking homology length within thr4::URA3 cassette from 1.1 to 2.5 or 6.5 kb. This suggests again that cells use longer stretch of ssDNA in homology search and it is beneficial for the repair accuracy. With longer homology we also observed 6–7 fold increase in targeting efficiency in wild-type cells, which is still 2 orders of magnitude less than the increase observed in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells. Only a slight increase in efficiency of targeting with longer homology but normal resection is not surprising because the resection rate (4 kb/hr) is high enough to degrade the cassette very quickly even when flanking homology is relatively long.

Figure 6. Elimination of enzymes that degrade DNA ends greatly stimulates gene targeting.

Figure 6

(A) A 2.1 kb thr4::URA3 cassette was used for a gene replacement assay in wild-type and mutant strains lacking one or more enzymes involved in DSB resection. Efficiency and accuracy of gene targeting measured as the amount of Ura+ or Ura+ Thr colonies is displayed. Error bars represent standard deviation for three independent experiments. (B) Hypothetical model presenting gene targeting in cells exhibiting normal processing of DNA ends and in cells with decreased resection. Extensive resection exposes the nonhomologous URA3 marker sequence and eventually degrades the transformed cassette. Exposed 3′ homologous tails are likely to be degraded faster in wild-type cells than in sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant cells.

Discussion

Benefits of extensive resection during DSB repair: fidelity of repair and checkpoint maintenance

We determined for the first time the length of ssDNA generated during DSB repair and showed that resection determines sequences used for homology search. Three different assays with different kinetics were used to measure resection: allelic recombination, ectopic recombination and BIR. Allelic recombination lasts about 2–3 hours which is similar to recombination between sister chromatids [47] and the average length of ssDNA accumulated during such repair is only 2–4 kb on each side of the break. Longer ssDNA (3–6 kb) was formed during the slower ectopic recombination assay. In these two assays, most of ssDNA accumulated before strand invasion, as the final repair product is formed 1.5 to 3 hours after DSB induction and only 20 minutes after strand invasion (Figure 1 and Figure 2; [24] and J. Haber, personal communication). We suggest that most ssDNA we detected in gene conversion assays participates in homology search. The 2–6 kb of ssDNA greatly exceed the amount of homology needed for efficient repair but may be beneficial for the fidelity of repair. If only very short sequences next to the break are involved in the homology search it may lead to recombination with short repeats. Involvement of longer ssDNA tails in the homology search would limit such recombination events. Indeed we demonstrated that in a mutant that generates only very short ssDNA at DSB ends, the homology search is limited to the vicinity of the break and repair involves only a short repeated sequence. In genomes with high numbers of short repeats, such as the 1 million copies of the 0.3 kb-long Alu repeats found in the human genome, involvement of longer sequences in the homology search can constitute an additional barrier for nonallelic recombination besides mismatch repair or the cohesin-mediated bias toward intersister chromatid recombination. However, resection is a double-edged sword as activation of longer ssDNA in the homology search also brings the risk of involvement of repetitive sequences located further away from the break [48]. Equal involvement of both DSB ends probably decreases such events [49]. Also, cells are able to downregulate resection to prevent too extensive chromosome degradation at DSBs [13].

Another reason why cells resect long ssDNA during repair probably relates to DNA damage checkpoint activation and maintenance. This could be particularly important during very slow repair by BIR where we found 10–15 kb of ssDNA. In BIR strand invasion occurs with kinetics comparable to gene conversion but 3′ ends prime new DNA synthesis only 2–3 hours later [25], [49]. The much longer ssDNA formed during BIR than during gene conversion suggests that resection continues after strand invasion. It is likely that this extensive resection after heteroduplex formation stimulates maintenance of DNA damage checkpoint arrest until cells repair the break. In conclusion short ssDNA might be sufficient for strand exchange processes but not for the checkpoint arrest that is needed to complete repair.

De novo telomere formation at poorly resected DSB ends

Telomere addition at spontaneous or induced DSBs was previously described in yeast, mouse and human cells [reviewed in [38]]. It is an extremely rare chromosome aberration in wild-type cells but frequent in tumor cells. Here we observed that cells in which resection is limited to a few hundred base pairs frequently use the alternative pathway of repair via de novo telomere addition. When the yeast inhibitor of telomerase, Pif1, was eliminated in poorly resecting mutants, most cells repaired the DSB using de novo telomere addition. Why do sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant cells very frequently use the alternative pathway of repair via de novo telomere addition? We think that a combination of repair, checkpoint and resection defect in this mutant is a key for the high level of new telomere addition at DSBs. Separately repair or checkpoint defective mutants do not affect new telomere formation so dramatically. In mutants such as rad52Δ that do not repair the breaks, new telomeres are not added [33] or added infrequently [35]. Also in checkpoint deficient cells like rad24Δ or rad9Δ there is only a slight increase in new telomere formation at DSBs. However in a sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutant, besides repair and checkpoint deficiency, decreased degradation at a DSB site prevents chromosome loss that gives cells more chance for alternative repair. Indeed all de novo telomeres in sgs1Δ exo1Δ and more than half in pif1-m2 sgs1Δ exo1Δ mutants formed only when cells divided once or more times after DSB induction. Another factor stimulating de novo telomere formation is that in sgs1Δ exo1Δ cells binding of Cdc13, a protein essential for telomerase recruitment, is increased. It is possible that at poorly resected DSBs like at telomeres that have very short ssDNA overhangs, Cdc13 can successfully compete with RPA for ssDNA. We also demonstrated that decreased resection partially bypassed the need for Ku70/80 for de novo telomere formation. The Ku complex is required for spontaneous and MMS-induced de novo telomere addition in cells with normal resection [36], [41]. Ku contributes to this process by direct recruitment of telomerase and/or by protecting DSB ends from degradation. Here we demonstrate, in a strain where ends are relatively stable with minimal ssDNA formation, a dramatic increase in de novo telomere formation even in the absence of Ku. The fact that deletion of both Sgs1 and Exo1 partially bypasses the need for the Ku complex that protects DNA ends from degradation indicates that the role of Sgs1 and Exo1 in resection, rather than another function of these enzymes, is important in preventing new telomere formation at DSBs.

Gene targeting in the absence of enzymes that degrade ssDNA

Gene targeting is a major technique in molecular biology that allows the precise modification of the genome and is envisaged as being a major future therapeutic approach for genetic disorders. One of the major problems of gene targeting in higher eukaryotes is the low efficiency and particularly the very low accuracy of this process. Here we observed a dramatic increase in gene targeting efficiency and accuracy in the absence of enzymes which resect 5′ strands, Sgs1 and Exo1 (Figure 6A). In the absence of both Sgs1 and Exo1, DSB ends are processed by the MRX complex and Sae2 to generate 100–1,000 bp of ssDNA [4], [5]. This is similar in size to the homologous sequence frequently provided as transformed DNA for gene targeting. We suggest that transformed DNA is similarly processed initially by the MRX complex and later by Exo1 and Sgs1. In the absence of both Sgs1 and Exo1, this transformed targeting cassette is probably stable for much longer than in wild-type cells, having only short ssDNA at the ends active in the homology search (Figure 6B). Together this gives a higher chance for correct integration into the genome. Longer homology within the transformed cassette increases gene targeting only slightly (6–7 fold), and is not comparable to the increase observed in the absence of processive resection enzymes. This is not surprising given the high 4 kb/hr resection rate. Sgs1 has an additional role in DSB repair as it suppresses the crossover pathway, presumably by double Holliday junction dissolution [22], [50]. Gene targeting presumably relies on crossover events between the transformed DNA cassette and the chromosome, therefore it is possible that besides decreased resection the absence of Sgs1 can stimulate targeting by increasing the crossover pathway. In the absence of both Sgs1 and Exo1 the accuracy of gene targeting is also increased. One possibility is that exposure of marker sequences within the transformed cassette inhibits correct integration even when the marker has no homology within the genome. Future experiments with cassettes that do not have a marker will help to investigate this possibility. An alternative explanation could be that quick exposure of the 3′ ends may lead to their degradation [20] leaving less homology on the ends of the transformed cassette and therefore more inaccurate targeting. It is likely that in human cells where Exo1 and BLM play comparable roles in resection to their yeast counterparts [3], gene targeting efficiency or accuracy could be increased by temporary depletion of both enzymes. Indeed, in human cells depletion of BLM helicase stimulates gene targeting [51]. However, in human cells there are additional nucleases that are not present in yeast such as cytoplasmic/nuclear TREX1 3′ exonuclease that is expressed in all cells. TREX1 was shown to degrade DNA arising from DNA replication, DNA damage, endogenous retroviruses or viral infection and TREX1-null mice accumulate DNA leading to chronic damage checkpoint activation [52], [53] [54]. These phenotypes strongly suggest that transformed DNA cassettes are a substrate for TREX1 as well. We think that one reason for the relatively less efficient and much less accurate gene targeting observed in human and other organisms when compared to yeast is due to the presence of additional nucleases that degrade transformed DNA. Future experiments will examine whether TREX1 interferes with gene targeting. A tempting speculation is that Sgs1 and Exo1 degrade any linear DNA in cells like the cDNA of retrotransposons or viral DNA thus protecting the genome from integration of foreign DNA. Accordingly in the absence of Sgs1, the frequency of retrotransposition increases in yeast [55].

Taking these observations together we have demonstrated that the extent of resection from a DSB has a fundamental role in determining the outcome of DSB repair and in the maintenance of genome stability. It will be important to understand how resection is regulated at a molecular level by checkpoint proteins and by chromatin remodeling to diminish the deleterious pathways of repair.

Materials and Methods

Strains

All strains used here are derivatives of four strains: (i) tGI354 to study ectopic recombination (hml:: ADE1 MAT a -inc hmr::ADE1 ade1 leu2–3,112 lys5 trp1::hisG ura3–52 ade3::GAL::HO arg5,6::HPH::MAT a); (ii) MK181, a gift from Martin Kupiec, to study recombination template choice with respect to resection distance (MAT a-inc ura3-HOcs-inc ade3::GAL-HO ade2-1 leu2–3,112 his3–11,15 trp1–1 can1–100); (iii) yGI234 to study allelic recombination (hml::ADE1/HML MAT a /MATα-inc hmr::ADE1/HMR ade1/ade1 leu2–3,112/leu2–3,112 lys5/LYS5 trp1/trp1 ura3–52/ura3–52 THR4/thr4::URA3 ade3::GAL::HO/ADE3); and (iv) disomic AM1003 to study BIR (MAT a -LEU2-tel/MATα-inc ade1 met13 ura3 leu2–3,112/leu2 thr4 hml::ADE1/hml::ADE3 hmr::HPH ade3::GAL-HO FS2::NAT/FS2). A list of all strains is presented as supplemental material (Table S1).

Measurement of 5′ strand resection and DSB repair

Measurement of resection during DSB repair was done by following the transient loss of restriction enzyme cutting sites at different distances from the break. DNA isolated by glass bead disruption using a standard phenol extraction method was digested with restriction enzymes and separated on 0.8% agarose gels. Southern blotting and hybridization with radiolabeled DNA probes was carried out as described previously [56]. Multiple DNA probes used for hybridization to detect 5′ strand resection beyond the restriction site, as well as the sequences of DNA primers used to prepare the probes by PCR, are listed in Table S2. Intensities of bands on Southern blots corresponding to probed DNA fragments were analyzed with ImageQuant TL (Amersham Biosciences). Quantities of DNA loaded on gels for each time point were normalized using a TRA1 gene DNA probe. DSB end resection beyond each restriction site for each time point in the ectopic recombination assay was estimated as a percentage of the signal intensity loss corresponding to the fragment of interest before break induction. In allelic recombination and in BIR assays both the HO cut chromosome and the homologous template chromosome have the same sequences and only the cut chromosome is being resected. In these two assays, therefore, we calculated DSB end resection beyond each restriction site as a percentage of the signal intensity corresponding to half of the signal of the fragment of interest before break induction. The donor choice assay was performed as previously described [30]. The probe used for detecting products of DSB repair was almost the entire LYS2 ORF (XbaI – HindIII). The kinetics of product formation (repair) at each time point was determined by dividing the normalized intensity of the band corresponding to the product by the normalized intensity of the initial uncut band at time 0.

Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE)

To analyze DSB repair products in AM1003 derivative mutant strains, chromosomal DNA plugs were prepared and separated on a 1% agarose gel at 6 V/cm for 30 hrs (initial time = 10 s, final time = 35 s) by using the CHEF DRII apparatus (Bio-Rad), followed by Southern blotting and hybridization using a DNA fragment containing ADE1 sequence as a probe.

Detection of de novo telomere addition sites

To determine where de novo telomeres were added, PCR was carried out using one primer complementary to telomeric repeat sequence (CA16; 5′-CACCACACCCACACAC-3′) [57] and another primer at a different distance from the HO break site (Telo-F10 [∼5 kb upstream of HO]; 5′-GTCGTGCAGGTACGACTTTA-3′, Telo-F8 [∼4 kb upstream of HO]; 5′-TCTTTCCCTCGCTACTCACA-3′, Telo-F6 [∼3 kb upstream of HO]; 5′-GTGAGCGTACAAGAAGCAAA-3′, Telo-F2 [∼2 kb upstream of HO]; 5′-GTTAAGTAGTAAGTTTGCGGAG-3′, Telo-F4 [∼1 kb upstream of HO]; 5′-CCAACTTTCTAGTATTCGGACA-3′). Amplified PCR products were isolated from agarose gels and sequenced.

Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)

ChIP analysis of Cdc13 binding was performed and quantification was done as described previously [5]. α-Myc antibody was purchased from Sigma (9E10). After immunoprecipitation and reverse crosslinking, SyBrGreen-based real-time PCR was carried out on an ABI 7900 machine using a pair of primers which anneal 1 kb upstream of the HO break site (MATX-F2, 5′-GGTAGGCGAGGACATTATCTATCA-3′; MATX-R3, 5′-GAAGAATACCAGTTTATCTCGCATTCAAATC-3′) as well as primers specific for the PRE1 gene located on chromosome V as a control.

Gene targeting efficiency and accuracy assay

An approximately 2.1 kb thr4:: URA3 cassette was PCR amplified from genomic DNA of the AM476 strain and 1 µg was used as a gene replacement construct for transformation of 1×108 JKM139 cells and its derivative mutant cells. To calculate gene targeting efficiency, the number of Ura+ colonies was normalized by plating efficiency and transformation efficiency with uncut centromeric YCp50 plasmid for each strain. The accuracy of gene replacement was calculated as the number of Ura+ Thr transformants.

Supporting Information

Figure S1

Kinetics of resection and HO induction in allelic recombination assay. (A) Schematic representation of allelic recombination assay between MAT a and MAT a-inc loci on chromosome III. Positions of EcoRI and HindIII sites and DNA probes used for Southern hybridization to analyze 5′ strand processing with respect to the HO recognition site are shown (yGI234). (B) Southern blotting analysis of resection and HO induction in allelic assay. The quantification is shown in Figure 2B. The same blot was probed subsequently with 8 different probes. Probes used for resection analysis recognize both the cut chromosome and the uncut homologous chromosome. Therefore, complete resection beyond each studied restriction fragment will eliminate only half of the studied restriction fragments. (C) Kinetics of HO break induction and DSB repair in allelic recombination assay.

(0.61 MB TIF)

Figure S2

DSB end resection in wild-type diploid cells. (A) The position of the restriction enzyme sites and the probes used to follow the resection kinetics in wild-type diploid cells at two different loci. (B) Southern blot analysis and plot demonstrating kinetics of resection are shown.

(0.24 MB TIF)

Figure S3

Kinetics of 5′ strand resection and repair in BIR assay. (A) Schematic representing BIR assay and the position of the restriction enzyme sites and the probe used to follow DSB repair via BIR. The probe used in this assay detects repair by BIR but not by gene conversion. (B) Southern blot analysis of HO break induction and repair in BIR assay. Quantification of repair and HO cut induction is shown. The kinetics of product formation in BIR assay at each time point was determined by subtracting the pixel intensity of the band corresponding to the initial (time 0) MATα template DNA EcoRI fragment from the sum of the intensities of the bands corresponding to the template MATα and the product DNA fragments multiplied by 100%. Quantities of DNA loaded on gels for each time point were normalized using a TRA1 gene DNA probe. (C) Southern blot analysis of 5′ strand resection in BIR assay. Quantification of 5′ strand resection is shown in Figure 2.

(0.73 MB TIF)

Figure S4

Analysis of repair products in allelic recombination system. (A) Schematic representation of allelic recombination assay between MAT a and MATα-inc loci on chromosome III. (B) The fate of the repair products was determined based on their auxotrophic markers in wild-type (yGI234) and exo1Δ sgs1Δ mutant (yWH847) cells. (C) To distinguish between BIR and de novo telomere formation, repair products from individual survivors that are Ade+ Thr- were analyzed by PFGE using an ADE1 probe. “0” indicates control before break induction. Position of chromosome I that carries the ade1–1 gene is shown, as the parental strains used to make the diploid strain carry chromosome I of different sizes.

(0.47 MB TIF)

Figure S5

Pif1 helicase does not affect 5′ end resection at the DSBs. Comparison of the resection kinetics in wild-type, exo1Δ sgs1Δ and pif1-m2 exo1Δ sgs1Δ mutant cells at three different loci (0, 3, and 28 kb away from the HO break site using MAT, BUD5, and FEN2 probes, respectively). Southern blot analysis is shown.

(0.64 MB TIF)

Table S1

Genotype of strains used in the study.

(0.08 MB PDF)

Table S2

Sequences of DNA primers used in the study.

(0.04 MB PDF)

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank E. Blackburn, S. Makovets, M. Kupiec, E. Kraus, J. Haber, and V. Zakian for strains and plasmids; J. Haber and for sharing unpublished data and Phil Hastings and Alison Bertuch for critical comments on the manuscript.

Footnotes

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

This work was supported by NIH grant GM080600 to GI and GM084242-01 to AM (http://nih.gov). The funder had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

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Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

Figure S1

Kinetics of resection and HO induction in allelic recombination assay. (A) Schematic representation of allelic recombination assay between MAT a and MAT a-inc loci on chromosome III. Positions of EcoRI and HindIII sites and DNA probes used for Southern hybridization to analyze 5′ strand processing with respect to the HO recognition site are shown (yGI234). (B) Southern blotting analysis of resection and HO induction in allelic assay. The quantification is shown in Figure 2B. The same blot was probed subsequently with 8 different probes. Probes used for resection analysis recognize both the cut chromosome and the uncut homologous chromosome. Therefore, complete resection beyond each studied restriction fragment will eliminate only half of the studied restriction fragments. (C) Kinetics of HO break induction and DSB repair in allelic recombination assay.

(0.61 MB TIF)

Figure S2

DSB end resection in wild-type diploid cells. (A) The position of the restriction enzyme sites and the probes used to follow the resection kinetics in wild-type diploid cells at two different loci. (B) Southern blot analysis and plot demonstrating kinetics of resection are shown.

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Figure S3

Kinetics of 5′ strand resection and repair in BIR assay. (A) Schematic representing BIR assay and the position of the restriction enzyme sites and the probe used to follow DSB repair via BIR. The probe used in this assay detects repair by BIR but not by gene conversion. (B) Southern blot analysis of HO break induction and repair in BIR assay. Quantification of repair and HO cut induction is shown. The kinetics of product formation in BIR assay at each time point was determined by subtracting the pixel intensity of the band corresponding to the initial (time 0) MATα template DNA EcoRI fragment from the sum of the intensities of the bands corresponding to the template MATα and the product DNA fragments multiplied by 100%. Quantities of DNA loaded on gels for each time point were normalized using a TRA1 gene DNA probe. (C) Southern blot analysis of 5′ strand resection in BIR assay. Quantification of 5′ strand resection is shown in Figure 2.

(0.73 MB TIF)

Figure S4

Analysis of repair products in allelic recombination system. (A) Schematic representation of allelic recombination assay between MAT a and MATα-inc loci on chromosome III. (B) The fate of the repair products was determined based on their auxotrophic markers in wild-type (yGI234) and exo1Δ sgs1Δ mutant (yWH847) cells. (C) To distinguish between BIR and de novo telomere formation, repair products from individual survivors that are Ade+ Thr- were analyzed by PFGE using an ADE1 probe. “0” indicates control before break induction. Position of chromosome I that carries the ade1–1 gene is shown, as the parental strains used to make the diploid strain carry chromosome I of different sizes.

(0.47 MB TIF)

Figure S5

Pif1 helicase does not affect 5′ end resection at the DSBs. Comparison of the resection kinetics in wild-type, exo1Δ sgs1Δ and pif1-m2 exo1Δ sgs1Δ mutant cells at three different loci (0, 3, and 28 kb away from the HO break site using MAT, BUD5, and FEN2 probes, respectively). Southern blot analysis is shown.

(0.64 MB TIF)

Table S1

Genotype of strains used in the study.

(0.08 MB PDF)

Table S2

Sequences of DNA primers used in the study.

(0.04 MB PDF)


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