J. Kim Holloway
Cornell University
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Featured researches published by J. Kim Holloway.
PLOS Genetics | 2008
J. Kim Holloway; James G. Booth; Winfried Edelmann; Clare H. McGowan; Paula E. Cohen
Two eukaryotic pathways for processing double-strand breaks (DSBs) as crossovers have been described, one dependent on the MutL homologs Mlh1 and Mlh3, and the other on the structure-specific endonuclease Mus81. Mammalian MUS81 has been implicated in maintenance of genomic stability in somatic cells; however, little is known about its role during meiosis. Mus81-deficient mice were originally reported as being viable and fertile, with normal meiotic progression; however, a more detailed examination of meiotic progression in Mus81-null animals and WT controls reveals significant meiotic defects in the mutants. These include smaller testis size, a depletion of mature epididymal sperm, significantly upregulated accumulation of MLH1 on chromosomes from pachytene meiocytes in an interference-independent fashion, and a subset of meiotic DSBs that fail to be repaired. Interestingly, chiasmata numbers in spermatocytes from Mus81−/− animals are normal, suggesting additional integrated mechanisms controlling the two distinct crossover pathways. This study is the first in-depth analysis of meiotic progression in Mus81-nullizygous mice, and our results implicate the MUS81 pathway as a regulator of crossover frequency and placement in mammals.
PLOS Genetics | 2013
Adam Auton; Yingrui Li; Jeffrey M. Kidd; Julie Nadel; J. Kim Holloway; Jessica J. Hayward; Paula E. Cohen; John M. Greally; Jun Wang; Carlos Bustamante; Adam R. Boyko
The identification of the H3K4 trimethylase, PRDM9, as the gene responsible for recombination hotspot localization has provided considerable insight into the mechanisms by which recombination is initiated in mammals. However, uniquely amongst mammals, canids appear to lack a functional version of PRDM9 and may therefore provide a model for understanding recombination that occurs in the absence of PRDM9, and thus how PRDM9 functions to shape the recombination landscape. We have constructed a fine-scale genetic map from patterns of linkage disequilibrium assessed using high-throughput sequence data from 51 free-ranging dogs, Canis lupus familiaris. While broad-scale properties of recombination appear similar to other mammalian species, our fine-scale estimates indicate that canine highly elevated recombination rates are observed in the vicinity of CpG rich regions including gene promoter regions, but show little association with H3K4 trimethylation marks identified in spermatocytes. By comparison to genomic data from the Andean fox, Lycalopex culpaeus, we show that biased gene conversion is a plausible mechanism by which the high CpG content of the dog genome could have occurred.
Nature Genetics | 2013
April Reynolds; Huanyu Qiao; Ye Yang; Jefferson K. Chen; Neil Jackson; Kajal Biswas; J. Kim Holloway; Frédéric Baudat; Bernard de Massy; Jeremy Wang; Christer Höög; Paula E. Cohen; Neil Hunter
Crossing-over ensures accurate chromosome segregation during meiosis, and every pair of chromosomes obtains at least one crossover, even though the majority of recombination sites yield non-crossovers. A putative regulator of crossing-over is RNF212, which is associated with variation in crossover rates in humans. We show that mouse RNF212 is essential for crossing-over, functioning to couple chromosome synapsis to the formation of crossover-specific recombination complexes. Selective localization of RNF212 to a subset of recombination sites is shown to be a key early step in the crossover designation process. RNF212 acts at these sites to stabilize meiosis-specific recombination factors, including the MutSγ complex (MSH4-MSH5). We infer that selective stabilization of key recombination proteins is a fundamental feature of meiotic crossover control. Haploinsufficiency indicates that RNF212 is a limiting factor for crossover control and raises the possibility that human alleles may alter the amount or stability of RNF212 and be risk factors for aneuploid conditions.
Nature Genetics | 2014
Huanyu Qiao; H.B.D. Prasada Rao; Ye Yang; Jared H. Fong; Jeffrey M. Cloutier; Dekker C Deacon; Kathryn E Nagel; Rebecca K Swartz; Edward Strong; J. Kim Holloway; Paula E. Cohen; John C. Schimenti; Jeremy O. Ward; Neil Hunter
Crossover recombination facilitates the accurate segregation of homologous chromosomes during meiosis. In mammals, poorly characterized regulatory processes ensure that every pair of chromosomes obtains at least one crossover, even though most recombination sites yield non-crossovers. Designation of crossovers involves selective localization of the SUMO ligase RNF212 to a minority of recombination sites, where it stabilizes pertinent factors such as MutSγ (ref. 4). Here we show that the ubiquitin ligase HEI10 (also called CCNB1IP1) is essential for this crossover/non-crossover differentiation process. In HEI10-deficient mice, RNF212 localizes to most recombination sites, and dissociation of both RNF212 and MutSγ from chromosomes is blocked. Consequently, recombination is impeded, and crossing over fails. In wild-type mice, HEI10 accumulates at designated crossover sites, suggesting that it also has a late role in implementing crossing over. As with RNF212, dosage sensitivity for HEI10 indicates that it is a limiting factor for crossing over. We suggest that SUMO and ubiquitin have antagonistic roles during meiotic recombination that are balanced to effect differential stabilization of recombination factors at crossover and non-crossover sites.
PLOS Genetics | 2011
J. Kim Holloway; Swapna Mohan; Gabriel Balmus; Xianfei Sun; Andrew J. Modzelewski; Peter L. Borst; Raimundo Freire; Robert S. Weiss; Paula E. Cohen
The mammalian ortholog of yeast Slx4, BTBD12, is an ATM substrate that functions as a scaffold for various DNA repair activities. Mutations of human BTBD12 have been reported in a new sub-type of Fanconi anemia patients. Recent studies have implicated the fly and worm orthologs, MUS312 and HIM-18, in the regulation of meiotic crossovers arising from double-strand break (DSB) initiating events and also in genome stability prior to meiosis. Using a Btbd12 mutant mouse, we analyzed the role of BTBD12 in mammalian gametogenesis. BTBD12 localizes to pre-meiotic spermatogonia and to meiotic spermatocytes in wildtype males. Btbd12 mutant mice have less than 15% normal spermatozoa and are subfertile. Loss of BTBD12 during embryogenesis results in impaired primordial germ cell proliferation and increased apoptosis, which reduces the spermatogonial pool in the early postnatal testis. During prophase I, DSBs initiate normally in Btbd12 mutant animals. However, DSB repair is delayed or impeded, resulting in persistent γH2AX and RAD51, and the choice of repair pathway may be altered, resulting in elevated MLH1/MLH3 focus numbers at pachynema. The result is an increase in apoptosis through prophase I and beyond. Unlike yeast Slx4, therefore, BTBD12 appears to function in meiotic prophase I, possibly during the recombination events that lead to the production of crossovers. In line with its expected regulation by ATM kinase, BTBD12 protein is reduced in the testis of Atm−/− males, and Btbd12 mutant mice exhibit increased genomic instability in the form of elevated blood cell micronucleus formation similar to that seen in Atm−/− males. Taken together, these data indicate that BTBD12 functions throughout gametogenesis to maintain genome stability, possibly by co-ordinating repair processes and/or by linking DNA repair events to the cell cycle via ATM.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2010
J. Kim Holloway; Meisha A. Morelli; Peter L. Borst; Paula E. Cohen
Improper chromosome pairing, synapsis, and segregation impair meiotic progression in the absence of the BLM helicase in mammalian cells.
Genes & Development | 2013
Jin Zhang; Roberto Bonasio; Francesco Strino; Yuval Kluger; J. Kim Holloway; Andrew J. Modzelewski; Paula E. Cohen; Danny Reinberg
SFMBT1 (Scm [Sex comb on midleg] with four MBT [malignant brain tumor] domains 1) is a poorly characterized mammalian MBT domain-containing protein homologous to Drosophila SFMBT, a Polycomb group protein involved in epigenetic regulation of gene expression. Here, we show that SFMBT1 regulates transcription in somatic cells and during spermatogenesis through the formation of a stable complex with LSD1 and CoREST. When bound to its gene targets, SFMBT1 recruits its associated proteins and causes chromatin compaction and transcriptional repression. SFMBT1, LSD1, and CoREST share a large fraction of target genes, including those encoding replication-dependent histones. Simultaneous occupancy of histone genes by SFMBT1, LSD1, and CoREST is regulated during the cell cycle and correlates with the loss of RNA polymerase II at these promoters during G2, M, and G1. The interplay between the repressive SFMBT1-LSD1-CoREST complex and RNA polymerase II contributes to the timely transcriptional regulation of histone genes in human cells. SFMBT1, LSD1, and CoREST also form a stable complex in germ cells, and their chromatin binding activity is regulated during spermatogenesis.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2014
J. Kim Holloway; Xianfei Sun; Rayka Yokoo; Anne M. Villeneuve; Paula E. Cohen
CNTD1 coordinates the maturation and designation of meiotic crossover sites from an excess pool of double-strand break intermediates by regulating dynamic changes in key protein complexes associated with these sites.
PLOS Genetics | 2013
Amy M. Lyndaker; Pei Xin Lim; Joanna M. Mleczko; Catherine E. Diggins; J. Kim Holloway; Rebecca J. Holmes; Rui Kan; Donald H. Schlafer; Raimundo Freire; Paula E. Cohen; Robert S. Weiss
The RAD9-RAD1-HUS1 (9-1-1) complex is a heterotrimeric PCNA-like clamp that responds to DNA damage in somatic cells by promoting DNA repair as well as ATR-dependent DNA damage checkpoint signaling. In yeast, worms, and flies, the 9-1-1 complex is also required for meiotic checkpoint function and efficient completion of meiotic recombination; however, since Rad9, Rad1, and Hus1 are essential genes in mammals, little is known about their functions in mammalian germ cells. In this study, we assessed the meiotic functions of 9-1-1 by analyzing mice with germ cell-specific deletion of Hus1 as well as by examining the localization of RAD9 and RAD1 on meiotic chromosomes during prophase I. Hus1 loss in testicular germ cells resulted in meiotic defects, germ cell depletion, and severely compromised fertility. Hus1-deficient primary spermatocytes exhibited persistent autosomal γH2AX and RAD51 staining indicative of unrepaired meiotic DSBs, synapsis defects, an extended XY body domain often encompassing partial or whole autosomes, and an increase in structural chromosome abnormalities such as end-to-end X chromosome-autosome fusions and ruptures in the synaptonemal complex. Most of these aberrations persisted in diplotene-stage spermatocytes. Consistent with a role for the 9-1-1 complex in meiotic DSB repair, RAD9 localized to punctate, RAD51-containing foci on meiotic chromosomes in a Hus1-dependent manner. Interestingly, RAD1 had a broader distribution that only partially overlapped with RAD9, and localization of both RAD1 and the ATR activator TOPBP1 to the XY body and to unsynapsed autosomes was intact in Hus1 conditional knockouts. We conclude that mammalian HUS1 acts as a component of the canonical 9-1-1 complex during meiotic prophase I to promote DSB repair and further propose that RAD1 and TOPBP1 respond to unsynapsed chromatin through an alternative mechanism that does not require RAD9 or HUS1.
Biology of Reproduction | 2010
Paula E. Cohen; J. Kim Holloway
Meiosis is the characteristic feature of sexual reproduction; its molecular regulation has been preserved throughout eukaryotic evolution. The defining stage of meiosis is prophase I (Fig. 1), in which homologous chromosomes pair and remain tethered until the first meiotic division, when they must segregate equally into daughter cells that then enter meiosis II. The importance of this stage is underscored by the fact that approximately 50% of all spontaneous miscarriages are due to nondisjunction errors at the first meiotic division [1, 2]. Although a large body of literature exists to confirm the molecular conservation of these processes across eukaryotes, one of the more startling observations from mammalian meiosis is that there are differences between the sexes in their meiotic progression [3] and, more specifically, in the source of meiotic errors in humans, because approximately 90% of chromosomally aneuploid human fetuses arise as a result of errors in maternal meiosis I [2, 5]. The timing and progression of meiosis also vary between the sexes. In females, oogonia enter meiosis during fetal development, arresting toward the end of prophase I in a prolonged state of diplotene known as dictyate arrest (Fig. 1). Meiosis resumes after puberty, when cohorts of oocytes are stimulated to undergo the first meiotic division with each estrous cycle and only complete the second meiotic division upon fertilization. Thus, oogenesis begins during fetal life, but it may take months (in rodents) or years (in primates) to complete. By contrast, male meiosis is not interrupted by arrest periods, and it occurs in a continuum from around the time of (or just prior to) puberty, after which spermatogonia continue to enter prophase I in waves throughout the life of the individual. What becomes obvious from these temporal differences is the inherent difficulty in studying meiotic events in females. The availability of female meiotic material is hampered, not only by the fact that one must retrieve such tissue from fetuses, but also because of the extremely limited amount of ovarian tissue available at these stages. Even in the mouse, where animal numbers may not be limiting, the use of female meiotic tissues for high-throughput biochemical, proteomics, or genomics research is hindered because of the small size of the fetal ovary. These issues are exacerbated in humans, with the result that very few studies have focused on meiotic events in human fetal ovaries [6–12]. Most of the published reports focus on confirmation in human oocytes of the molecular pathways involved in synapsis and recombination derived from mouse data [6, 13]. Several groups have attempted to address whether and how events during fetal meiosis in human oocytes may be a causative factor in human nondisjunction [6, 8, 10, 14]. These studies have mainly used surface spread chromosome preparations (e.g., Fig. 2), and although substantial data have been accumulated, little new information has been obtained concerning the details of genetic regulation that is unique/ specific to humans. An exciting report from Zheng et al. [15] in this issue of Biology of Reproduction attempts to overcome these difficulties by providing the first functional gene network for human fetal germ cells, HFOnet. This network provides a tool to predict and assess the meiotic role of genes from multiple pathways in a tissue (the human fetal ovary) that is poorly accessible through traditional laboratory sources.