Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

C14ORF39/SIX6OS1 is a constituent of the synaptonemal complex and is essential for mouse fertility

2016; Nature Portfolio; Volume: 7; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1038/ncomms13298

ISSN

2041-1723

Autores

Laura Gómez-H, Natalia Felipe‐Medina, Manuel Sánchez‐Martín, Owen R. Davies, Isabel Ramos, Ignacio García‐Tuñón, Dirk G. de Rooij, Ihsan Dereli, Attila Tóth, José Luís Barbero, Ricardo Benavente, Elena Llano, Alberto M. Pendás,

Tópico(s)

Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms

Resumo

Abstract Meiotic recombination generates crossovers between homologous chromosomes that are essential for genome haploidization. The synaptonemal complex is a ‘zipper’-like protein assembly that synapses homologue pairs together and provides the structural framework for processing recombination sites into crossovers. Humans show individual differences in the number of crossovers generated across the genome. Recently, an anonymous gene variant in C14ORF39/SIX6OS1 was identified that influences the recombination rate in humans. Here we show that C14ORF39/SIX6OS1 encodes a component of the central element of the synaptonemal complex. Yeast two-hybrid analysis reveals that SIX6OS1 interacts with the well-established protein synaptonemal complex central element 1 (SYCE1). Mice lacking SIX6OS1 are defective in chromosome synapsis at meiotic prophase I, which provokes an arrest at the pachytene-like stage and results in infertility. In accordance with its role as a modifier of the human recombination rate, SIX6OS1 is essential for the appropriate processing of intermediate recombination nodules before crossover formation.

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