We report that Pds5 is required for homologue synapsis and cell progression through meiosis I. When Pds5 is absent, most cells are arrested at prophase I with highly compacted chromosomes, and an SC-like structure forms between sister chromatids. Cohesion between sisters is largely intact, as only small amounts of precocious sister separation are observed. DSBs form but are not fully resolved, indicating that DSB repair is defective. Our work significantly extends previous observations of the role of Pds5 in formation of meiotic chromosome structure. These novel observations may arise because our experiments involved a meiotic
pds5-null allele, whereas previous studies involved thermosensitive
pds5 alleles. These thermosensitive alleles make mutated proteins that still bind to chromosomes and therefore retain residual Pds5 activity (
Storlazzi et al., 2008; unpublished data).
Previous work in budding yeast indicated that Rec8 promotes SC formation and homologue synapsis because neither of these events occurs when Mcd1 replaces Rec8 (
Klein et al., 1999;
Buonomo et al., 2000). We show that Pds5 serves an important inhibitory role because when Pds5 is absent, SCs form between sisters rather than homologues. This intersister SC formation requires Rec8 because when Mcd1 replaces Rec8 in Pds5-depleted cells, no SCs form. These data are consistent with the idea that Pds5 restrains the SC-promoting activity of Rec8. This reasoning seems at odds with the situation in vertebrates, where intersister SCs form when
REC8 is deleted (
Xu et al., 2005). This result suggests that vertebrate Rec8 serves as an inhibitor, much as Pds5 does in yeast. One possibility is that yeast and vertebrate cells prevent SC formation between sisters by distinct mechanisms. Alternatively, vertebrates also contain other meiosis-specific cohesins, such as SMC1β and STAG3 (
Prieto et al., 2001;
Revenkova et al., 2001). Therefore, deleting vertebrate
REC8 could generate meiotic cohesin with a reduced affinity for Pds5 to relieve the inhibition of intersister SC formation, but these other meiosis-specific subunits could also provide cues for SC formation or have acquired the roles entirely. Further experiments assessing the chromosomal binding of one or both Pds5 orthologues in vertebrates and the consequence of their absence can distinguish between these possibilities.
A remarkable feature of meiotic recombination is its preference for using homologues as repair templates during DSB repair (
Haber, 2000). This distinction must be made to ensure that DSBs promote synapsis between homologues rather than the more proximal sister chromatid. One model posits that fusion of sister chromatid axes removes the choice so that only the homologue presents a target for exchange and SC formation (for review see
Zickler and Kleckner, 1999). In such a model, Pds5 could be directly required for axial fusion or could promote it by modulating the activity of other chromosomal factors, such as cohesin. Indeed, our EM analysis of the chromosome axis in Pds5-depleted cells suggests that sister axes are apart. Similarly, sister axes are often split in
Sordaria
macrospora cells bearing a thermosensitive allele of
spo76-1/pds5 (
van Heemst et al., 1999;
Storlazzi et al., 2003). This splitting provides two sister axes in close proximity and, therefore, a potential substrate on which DSBs can nucleate intersister SC formation. During homologue pairing, discrete loci initiate SC formation simultaneously along the chromosome (
Zickler, 2006). Localized sister chromatid and axial separation is thought to be part of the process used for homologue exchange (for review see
Zickler and Kleckner, 1999). Paradoxically, localized sister separation would seem to provide a sister template to compete with the homologue for pairing rather than promoting it. One solution to this paradox is that axial separation is a consequence of localized dissolution of cohesion, but the separated sisters are then blocked for cohesion reestablishment. We propose that Pds5 exerts its inhibitory function at this step. Cohesin may remain bound but in a form that is inhibited for cohesion reestablishment, as was previously proposed for the regulation of S phase cohesion (
Guacci, 2007). Work from both budding and fission yeast shows that Pds5 serves as an inhibitor to cohesion establishment by opposing the action of the conserved establishment factor Eco1 on cohesin (
Tanaka et al., 2001;
Rowland et al., 2009;
Sutani et al., 2009). This result could explain how Pds5 acts as an inhibitor of cohesion and, as such, potentially of intersister SC formation even after sister axial splitting occurred as part of homologue exchange.
One might expect that sister chromatid exchange would increase in
pds5-null cells at the expense of homologue exchange because SCs form between sisters rather than homologues. Previous work on
pds5 thermosensitive alleles suggested that Pds5 serves to bias recombination toward interhomologue exchange rather than intersister exchange (
van Heemst et al., 1999;
Storlazzi et al., 2003;
Kateneva and Dresser, 2006), which is also consistent with such an expectation, but we do not see evidence for such a shift because the level of unequal sister chromatid exchange remains low in Pds5-depleted cells compared with that in the wild type (unpublished data). Moreover, we find that DSBs are not completely repaired in Pds5-depleted cells in budding yeast, suggesting that intersister SC formation alone is insufficient to promote sister chromatid exchange/repair. Cohesin is essential for efficient repair of DSBs in vegetative cells (for review see
Onn et al., 2008). Given that Pds5 interacts with cohesin to modulate cohesin function, the impairment of DSB repair in the absence of Pds5 during meiosis is not surprising. In addition, only part of the machinery necessary for sister exchange may be set up for intersister SC formation in
pds5-null cells, possibly leading to the persistence of DSBs.
A model for chromosome structure in which chromosome condensation is regulated by cohesin was first proposed more than a decade ago (
Guacci et al., 1997). It posits that cohesin binds at intervals along the chromosome arms, creating DNA loops between cohesin-binding sites that can be compacted. In this model, higher cohesin density forms smaller loops, whereas lower cohesin density forms larger loops, which would result in lesser and greater axial compaction, respectively (
Guacci et al., 1997). Experimental data consistent with this view came from studies of meiotic chromosomes (
Ding et al., 2006;
Novak et al., 2008). In both budding and fission yeast cells lacking Pds5, meiotic chromosomes hypercondense (
Ding et al., 2006; this study). In fission yeast
pds5 mutants, Rec8 still binds chromosomes, but the binding sites are more widely spaced, a result that is consistent with the idea that loop size is inversely proportional to axial condensation (
Ding et al., 2006). In budding yeast, cohesin binding to chromosomes appears to be normal, but sister chromatid cohesion is partially lost (this study; unpublished data). Importantly, chromosomes still hypercondense in Pds5-depleted cells when ectopically expressed Mcd1 replaces Rec8. These data suggest that cohesin is required to provide an axial template to permit proper chromosome compaction. In vertebrate cells, chromosomes become hypercondensed when the meiosis-specific cohesin subunit SMC1β has been deleted (
Revenkova et al., 2004;
Novak et al., 2008). Unlike budding yeast, vertebrate cells have high levels of mitotic cohesin, and REC8-containing meiotic cohesin is still present in cells lacking SMC1β (
Novak et al., 2008). Because these complexes bind chromosomes, one or both types of cohesin are probably able to serve as axis templates and permit loop formation (
Novak et al., 2008). The reduced cohesin activity in vertebrates that leads to a partial loss of sister chromatid cohesion could mimic a yeast Pds5 depletion phenotype, resulting in axial hypercompaction and the formation of heterogeneous chromatin loops.