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roles in fertility and the maintenance of genome integrity The Drosophila WRN Exonuclease Ralph S. Lasala 1,2, Lynne S. Cox 2, and Robert D. C. Saunders 1 1 Department of Life Sciences, The Open University, Milton Keynes 2 Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, Oxford September 2008
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Werner Syndrome (WS) A progeria syndrome, and a model for ageing short stature greying of hair cataracts skin ulcerations chromosomal instability Autosomal recessive mutation of WRN
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Chromosomal Defects in Cells from WS Patients Chromosome rearrangements Aberrant mitotic recombination Sensitivity to DNA-damaging agents such as camptothecin Difficulty in overcoming obstacles to replication Asymmetry in normal bidirectional progression of replication forks
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RecQ homologues from a range of taxa are shown Domain structure is indicated Only WRN contains an exonuclease domain in addition to the helicase domain WRN-like helicases have only been found in vertebrates In other taxa helicase and exonuclease functions are thought to be on separate polypeptides WRN homologues
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Why Drosophila? WS material limiting Difficult to analyse combined helicase/exonuclease – thought to reside in separate polypeptides in Drosophila Drosophila has powerful genetic and transgenic technology
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CG7670 encodes a homologue of WRN exonuclease Drosophila WRN Exonuclease (DmWRNexo) 353 amino acids (~40kDa) 3'-5' exonuclease activity shown in vitro (Boubriak et al, submitted)
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CG7670 mutants CG7670 e04496 - strong hypomorph CG7670 D229V - weaker, point mutation two phenotypes: –increased mitotic recombination –hypersensitivity to camptothecin males are fertile females are sterile (maternal effect lethal?)
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this cell is homozygous for mwh 1 - will give rise to a mwh clone this cell is homozygous for the wild type allele of mwh - will give rise to a wild type clone, indistinguishable from the rest of the wing blade cells mwh + + + + + the fly is heterozygous for mwh 1 – the wing blade cells are normal, with a single hair each
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Mitotic Recombination in CG7670 e04496
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Project Aims 1.Characterise the female sterility (maternal effect lethality) of CG7670 e04496 homozygotes 2.Test germ-line dependence of female sterility 3.Evaluate rDNA replication in CG7670 e04496 homozygotes, both genetically, andusing molecular techniques
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Early Embryogenesis a syncytium of nuclei –13 nuclear divisions following fertilisation –rapid division cycles lasting 10 mins (S - M) –no G1 or G2 phases –after 7 th or 8 th division, some reach surface (pole cells form) –during telophase of cycles 8 and 9, migrate to the cortex syncytial blastoderm (cycles 10-13) –zygotic transcription cellularisation Foe and Alberts, 1983 Campos-Ortega and Hartenstein, 1985
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No Defect
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Gaps
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Asynchrony
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Anaphase Bridge
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Defects in CG7670 Mutant Embryos low levels of DmWRNexo --- defects in chromosome segregation and mitotic synchrony during early embryogenesis defective nuclei are removed --- patches or gaps
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rDNA and bobbed Ribosomal RNA genes in tandem arrays of ~200 copies Located on X and Y chromosomes Partial or complete loss of rDNA locus leads to bobbed phenotype Does loss of DmWRNexo lead to difficulty in rDNA replication?
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Assay for rDNA instability in CG7670 e04496 X chromosomes propagated patroclinously in homozygous mutant background Assay for appearance bobbed phenotype PCR assay for subtler loss of rDNA
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What Next immunostaining more microscopy live imaging rDNA / bobbed experiment –PCR-based assays detailed analysis of rDNA stability –DNA fibre spreading
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Acknowledgements Robert Saunders Lynne Cox David Clancy Ivan Boubriak Penelope Mason
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