MutS homolog 4 localization to meiotic chromosomes is required for chromosome pairing during meiosis in male and female mice

  1. Burkhard Kneitz1,5,
  2. Paula E. Cohen2,5,
  3. Elena Avdievich1,
  4. Liyin Zhu2,
  5. Michael F. Kane3,
  6. Harry Hou, Jr.1,
  7. Richard D. Kolodner3,
  8. Raju Kucherlapati4,
  9. Jeffrey W. Pollard2, and
  10. Winfried Edelmann1,6
  1. Departments of 1Cell Biology, 2Developmental and Molecular Biology, and 4Molecular Genetics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, The Bronx, New York 10461 USA; 3Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, LaJolla, California 92093 USA

Abstract

Msh4 (MutS homolog 4) is a member of the mammalian mismatch repair gene family whose members are involved in postreplicative DNA mismatch repair as well as in the control of meiotic recombination. In this report we show that MSH4 has an essential role in the control of male and female meiosis. We demonstrate that MSH4 is present in the nuclei of spermatocytes early in prophase I and that it forms discrete foci along meiotic chromosomes during the zygotene and pachytene stages of meiosis. Disruption of the Msh4 gene in mice results in male and female sterility due to meiotic failure. Although meiosis is initiated in Msh4 mutant male and female mice, as indicated by the chromosomal localization of RAD51 and COR1 during leptonema/zygonema, the chromosomes fail to undergo normal pairing. Our results show that MSH4 localization on chromosomes during the early stages of meiosis is essential for normal chromosome synapsis in prophase I and that it acts in the same pathway as MSH5.

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Footnotes

  • 5 These authors contributed equally to this work.

  • 6 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL edelmann{at}aecom.yu.edu; FAX (718) 430-8972.

    • Received February 8, 2000.
    • Accepted March 22, 2000.
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