The EMBO Journal
 
Advanced search
Journal home
Aims and scope
Current issue
Advance Online Publication
Web Focuses
Archive:-
Browse by issue
Browse by subject
Browse by category
Free online sample issue
Press releases
Authors & Referees
Editorial process
Guide for authors
Submit an article
Guide for referees
Editorial Team, Senior Advisors and Advisory Editorial Board
Contact Editorial office
Customer services
Subscribe
Order sample copy
Purchase articles
Reprints and permissions
Contact NPG
Advertising
EMBO
www.embo.org
Article
The EMBO Journal (1998) 17, 4503–4510, doi:10.1093/emboj/17.15.4503
A site- and strand-specific DNA break confers asymmetric switching potential in fission yeast
Benoit Arcangioli
Unité des Virus Oncogènes, URA 1644 du CNRS, Departement des Biotechnologies, Institut Pasteur, 25 rue du Dr Roux, 75724 Paris cedex 15, France e-mail: barcan@pasteur.fr


Received 12 February 1998; Revised 8 June 1998; Accepted 8 June 1998.
Abstract
Mating-type switching in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe results in the transfer of genetic information from one of the two silent cassettes (mat2P or mat3M) to the transcriptionally active locus (mat1). The switching pattern is programmed by an imprinting event which restricts mat1 gene conversion to only one of the two sister cells, leading to asymmetric cell division. Biochemical analysis indicated that the mat1 locus contains a fragile chromosomal site. Southern hybridization and primer extension experiments showed that the fragility consists of a single-strand break (SSB). The nicked DNA is stable throughout the cell cycle. The features of the nick fulfil all the requirements for the 'epigenetic', site and strand-specific chromosome modification at the mat1 locus, providing strong evidence that an SSB can initiate mitotic and meiotic gene conversion during replication.
Keywords: imprinting, nick, recombination, replication, Schizosaccharomyces pombe
Send to a friendEmail link to a friend
PDFDownload PDF
Full textFull text
Next article
Previous article
Table of contents
rights and permissionsRights and permissions
order commercial reprintsReprints
ToC alertRegister for table of contents by email
  Privacy policy Copyright © 1998 by the European Molecular Biology Organization