PLoS Genetics (Mar 2019)

Live cell monitoring of double strand breaks in S. cerevisiae.

  • David P Waterman,
  • Felix Zhou,
  • Kevin Li,
  • Cheng-Sheng Lee,
  • Michael Tsabar,
  • Vinay V Eapen,
  • Allison Mazzella,
  • James E Haber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 3
p. e1008001

Abstract

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We have used two different live-cell fluorescent protein markers to monitor the formation and localization of double-strand breaks (DSBs) in budding yeast. Using GFP derivatives of the Rad51 recombination protein or the Ddc2 checkpoint protein, we find that cells with three site-specific DSBs, on different chromosomes, usually display 2 or 3 foci that may coalesce and dissociate. This motion is independent of Rad52 and microtubules. Rad51-GFP, by itself, is unable to repair DSBs by homologous recombination in mitotic cells, but is able to form foci and allow repair when heterozygous with a wild type Rad51 protein. The kinetics of formation and disappearance of a Rad51-GFP focus parallels the completion of site-specific DSB repair. However, Rad51-GFP is proficient during meiosis when homozygous, similar to rad51 "site II" mutants that can bind single-stranded DNA but not complete strand exchange. Rad52-RFP and Rad51-GFP co-localize to the same DSB, but a significant minority of foci have Rad51-GFP without visible Rad52-RFP. We conclude that co-localization of foci in cells with 3 DSBs does not represent formation of a homologous recombination "repair center," as the same distribution of Ddc2-GFP foci was found in the absence of the Rad52 protein.