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Publication : The DNA Damage Checkpoint Eliminates Mouse Oocytes with Chromosome Synapsis Failure.

First Author  Rinaldi VD Year  2017
Journal  Mol Cell Volume  67
Issue  6 Pages  1026-1036.e2
PubMed ID  28844861 Mgi Jnum  J:253200
Mgi Id  MGI:6106847 Doi  10.1016/j.molcel.2017.07.027
Citation  Rinaldi VD, et al. (2017) The DNA Damage Checkpoint Eliminates Mouse Oocytes with Chromosome Synapsis Failure. Mol Cell 67(6):1026-1036.e2
abstractText  Pairing and synapsis of homologous chromosomes during meiosis is crucial for producing genetically normal gametes and is dependent upon repair of SPO11-induced double-strand breaks (DSBs) by homologous recombination. To prevent transmission of genetic defects, diverse organisms have evolved mechanisms to eliminate meiocytes containing unrepaired DSBs or unsynapsed chromosomes. Here we show that the CHK2 (CHEK2)-dependent DNA damage checkpoint culls not only recombination-defective mouse oocytes but also SPO11-deficient oocytes that are severely defective in homolog synapsis. The checkpoint is triggered in oocytes that accumulate a threshold level of spontaneous DSBs ( approximately 10) in late prophase I, the repair of which is inhibited by the presence of HORMAD1/2 on unsynapsed chromosome axes. Furthermore, Hormad2 deletion rescued the fertility of oocytes containing a synapsis-proficient, DSB repair-defective mutation in a gene (Trip13) required for removal of HORMADs from synapsed chromosomes, suggesting that many meiotic DSBs are normally repaired by intersister recombination in mice.
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