Nature Communications (Oct 2023)

MSH2 stimulates interfering and inhibits non-interfering crossovers in response to genetic polymorphism

  • Julia Dluzewska,
  • Wojciech Dziegielewski,
  • Maja Szymanska-Lejman,
  • Monika Gazecka,
  • Ian R. Henderson,
  • James D. Higgins,
  • Piotr A. Ziolkowski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-42511-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Meiotic crossovers can be formed through the interfering pathway, in which one crossover prevents another from forming nearby, or by an independent non-interfering pathway. In Arabidopsis, local sequence polymorphism between homologs can stimulate interfering crossovers in a MSH2-dependent manner. To understand how MSH2 regulates crossovers formed by the two pathways, we combined Arabidopsis mutants that elevate non-interfering crossovers with msh2 mutants. We demonstrate that MSH2 blocks non-interfering crossovers at polymorphic loci, which is the opposite effect to interfering crossovers. We also observe MSH2-independent crossover inhibition at highly polymorphic sites. We measure recombination along the chromosome arms in lines differing in patterns of heterozygosity and observe a MSH2-dependent crossover increase at the boundaries between heterozygous and homozygous regions. Here, we show that MSH2 is a master regulator of meiotic DSB repair in Arabidopsis, with antagonistic effects on interfering and non-interfering crossovers, which shapes the crossover landscape in relation to interhomolog polymorphism.