Homologous chromosome interactions in meiosis: diversity amidst conservation
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Gerald R. Smith,et al. Dynein Promotes Achiasmate Segregation in Schizosaccharomyces pombe , 2005, Genetics.
[2] R. Camerini-Otero,et al. The Hop2 and Mnd1 proteins act in concert with Rad51 and Dmc1 in meiotic recombination , 2005, Nature Structural &Molecular Biology.
[3] S. Burgess,et al. Multiple branches of the meiotic recombination pathway contribute independently to homolog pairing and stable juxtaposition during meiosis in budding yeast. , 2005, Genes & development.
[4] Akira Shinohara,et al. A Protein Complex Containing Mei5 and Sae3 Promotes the Assembly of the Meiosis-Specific RecA Homolog Dmc1 , 2004, Cell.
[5] J. Graves,et al. In the platypus a meiotic chain of ten sex chromosomes shares genes with the bird Z and mammal X chromosomes , 2004, Nature.
[6] Hideo Tsubouchi,et al. The Budding Yeast Mei5 and Sae3 Proteins Act Together With Dmc1 During Meiotic Recombination , 2004, Genetics.
[7] R. Hawley,et al. The genetics and molecular biology of the synaptonemal complex. , 2004, Annual review of cell and developmental biology.
[8] A. Villeneuve,et al. C. elegans HIM-17 Links Chromatin Modification and Competence for Initiation of Meiotic Recombination , 2004, Cell.
[9] D. Dawson,et al. A role for centromere pairing in meiotic chromosome segregation. , 2004, Genes & development.
[10] A. Shinohara,et al. Rad6-Bre1-mediated histone H2B ubiquitylation modulates the formation of double-strand breaks during meiosis. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[11] A. H. Wang,et al. Heterodimeric complexes of Hop2 and Mnd1 function with Dmc1 to promote meiotic homolog juxtaposition and strand assimilation. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[12] Hong Ma,et al. The Arabidopsis AtRAD51 gene is dispensable for vegetative development but required for meiosis. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[13] F. Klein,et al. Mnd1 Is Required for Meiotic Interhomolog Repair , 2004, Current Biology.
[14] Scott Keeney,et al. Tying synaptonemal complex initiation to the formation and programmed repair of DNA double-strand breaks. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[15] S. Burgess. Homolog pairing in S. pombe: the ends are the means. , 2004, Molecular cell.
[16] P. Shaw,et al. Chromosomes associate premeiotically and in xylem vessel cells via their telomeres and centromeres in diploid rice (Oryza sativa) , 2004, Chromosoma.
[17] Y. Hiraoka,et al. Dynamics of homologous chromosome pairing during meiotic prophase in fission yeast. , 2004, Developmental cell.
[18] R. Camerini-Otero,et al. The Hop2 protein has a direct role in promoting interhomolog interactions during mouse meiosis. , 2003, Developmental cell.
[19] G. Roeder,et al. The importance of genetic recombination for fidelity of chromosome pairing in meiosis. , 2003, Developmental cell.
[20] N. Kleckner,et al. Meiotic double-strand breaks at the interface of chromosome movement, chromosome remodeling, and reductional division. , 2003, Genes & development.
[21] Chao Zhang,et al. Mek1 kinase activity functions downstream of RED1 in the regulation of meiotic double strand break repair in budding yeast. , 2003, Molecular biology of the cell.
[22] N. Kleckner,et al. Localization and roles of Ski8p protein in Sordaria meiosis and delineation of three mechanistically distinct steps of meiotic homolog juxtaposition , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[23] R. Hawley,et al. Chromosome Choreography: The Meiotic Ballet , 2003, Science.
[24] Stephen C. West,et al. Molecular views of recombination proteins and their control , 2003, Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology.
[25] L. Symington. Role of RAD52 Epistasis Group Genes in Homologous Recombination and Double-Strand Break Repair , 2002, Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews.
[26] A. Villeneuve,et al. Synapsis-dependent and -independent mechanisms stabilize homolog pairing during meiotic prophase in C. elegans. , 2002, Genes & development.
[27] J. Sedat,et al. The Dynamics of Homologous Chromosome Pairing during Male Drosophila Meiosis , 2002, Current Biology.
[28] S. Burgess,et al. Close, stable homolog juxtaposition during meiosis in budding yeast is dependent on meiotic recombination, occurs independently of synapsis, and is distinct from DSB-independent pairing contacts. , 2002, Genes & development.
[29] J. Derisi,et al. Mnd1p: An evolutionarily conserved protein required for meiotic recombination , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[30] G. Roeder,et al. The Mnd1 Protein Forms a Complex with Hop2 To Promote Homologous Chromosome Pairing and Meiotic Double-Strand Break Repair , 2002, Molecular and Cellular Biology.
[31] Eurie L. Hong,et al. Saccharomyces cerevisiae Dmc1 Protein Promotes Renaturation of Single-strand DNA (ssDNA) and Assimilation of ssDNA into Homologous Super-coiled Duplex DNA* , 2001, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[32] Y. Hiraoka,et al. A novel meiosis‐specific protein of fission yeast, Meu13p, promotes homologous pairing independently of homologous recombination , 2001, The EMBO journal.
[33] N. Kleckner,et al. The Single-End Invasion An Asymmetric Intermediate at the Double-Strand Break to Double-Holliday Junction Transition of Meiotic Recombination , 2001, Cell.
[34] Attila Tóth,et al. A screen for genes required for meiosis and spore formation based on whole-genome expression , 2001, Current Biology.
[35] T. Allers,et al. Intermediates of yeast meiotic recombination contain heteroduplex DNA. , 2001, Molecular cell.
[36] P. Shaw,et al. The Ph1 locus is needed to ensure specific somatic and meiotic centromere association , 2001, Nature.
[37] T. Petes,et al. Meiotic recombination hot spots and cold spots , 2001, Nature Reviews Genetics.
[38] P. Hunt,et al. To err (meiotically) is human: the genesis of human aneuploidy , 2001, Nature Reviews Genetics.
[39] N. Kleckner,et al. γ-H2AX illuminates meiosis , 2001, Nature Genetics.
[40] S. Keeney,et al. Recombinational DNA double-strand breaks in mice precede synapsis , 2001, Nature Genetics.
[41] M. Grelon,et al. AtSPO11‐1 is necessary for efficient meiotic recombination in plants , 2001, The EMBO journal.
[42] S. Keeney,et al. Chromosome synapsis defects and sexually dimorphic meiotic progression in mice lacking Spo11. , 2000, Molecular cell.
[43] R. Camerini-Otero,et al. The mouse Spo11 gene is required for meiotic chromosome synapsis. , 2000, Molecular cell.
[44] P. Brown,et al. Global mapping of meiotic recombination hotspots and coldspots in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. , 2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[45] M. Zolan,et al. Multiple roles of Spo11 in meiotic chromosome behavior , 2000, The EMBO journal.
[46] S. Keeney,et al. Progression of meiotic DNA replication is modulated by interchromosomal interaction proteins, negatively by Spo11p and positively by Rec8p. , 2000, Genes & development.
[47] R. Pearlman,et al. Rad51 and Dmc1 Form Mixed Complexes Associated with Mouse Meiotic Chromosome Cores and Synaptonemal Complexes , 1999, The Journal of cell biology.
[48] M. Doutriaux,et al. Random Chromosome Segregation without Meiotic Arrest in Both Male and Female Meiocytes of a dmc1 Mutant of Arabidopsis , 1999, Plant Cell.
[49] S M Burgess,et al. Collisions between yeast chromosomal loci in vivo are governed by three layers of organization. , 1999, Genes & development.
[50] J. McIntosh,et al. A Cytoplasmic Dynein Heavy Chain Is Required for Oscillatory Nuclear Movement of Meiotic Prophase and Efficient Meiotic Recombination in Fission Yeast , 1999, The Journal of cell biology.
[51] T. Petes,et al. Maximal stimulation of meiotic recombination by a yeast transcription factor requires the transcription activation domain and a DNA-binding domain. , 1999, Genetics.
[52] R. Rothstein,et al. Three-Dimensional Microscopy of the Rad51 Recombination Protein during Meiotic Prophase , 1999, Plant Cell.
[53] H. Scherthan,et al. Bouquet formation in budding yeast: initiation of recombination is not required for meiotic telomere clustering. , 1999, Journal of cell science.
[54] G. Roeder,et al. Telomere-mediated chromosome pairing during meiosis in budding yeast. , 1998, Genes & development.
[55] A. Villeneuve,et al. Meiotic Recombination in C. elegans Initiates by a Conserved Mechanism and Is Dispensable for Homologous Chromosome Synapsis , 1998, Cell.
[56] G. Roeder,et al. The Meiosis-Specific Hop2 Protein of S. cerevisiae Ensures Synapsis between Homologous Chromosomes , 1998, Cell.
[57] Robin C. Allshire,et al. Defective meiosis in telomere-silencing mutants of Schizosaccharomyces pombe , 1998, Nature.
[58] M. Handel,et al. Meiotic prophase arrest with failure of chromosome synapsis in mice deficient for Dmc1, a germline-specific RecA homolog. , 1998, Molecular cell.
[59] Paul Nurse,et al. Fission yeast Taz1 protein is required for meiotic telomere clustering and recombination , 1998, Nature.
[60] J. Sekelsky,et al. Meiotic synapsis in the absence of recombination. , 1998, Science.
[61] G. R. Smith,et al. Transcription factor Mts1/Mts2 (Atf1/Pcr1, Gad7/Pcr1) activates the M26 meiotic recombination hotspot in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. , 1997, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[62] N. Kleckner,et al. Interhomolog Bias during Meiotic Recombination: Meiotic Functions Promote a Highly Differentiated Interhomolog-Only Pathway , 1997, Cell.
[63] N. M. Hollingsworth,et al. Genetic interactions between HOP1, RED1 and MEK1 suggest that MEK1 regulates assembly of axial element components during meiosis in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. , 1997, Genetics.
[64] M. Conrad,et al. Ndj1p, a meiotic telomere protein required for normal chromosome synapsis and segregation in yeast. , 1997, Science.
[65] T. Shibata,et al. The meiotic recombination hot spot created by the single-base substitution ade6-M26 results in remodeling of chromatin structure in fission yeast. , 1997, Genes & development.
[66] A. Nicolas,et al. An atypical topoisomerase II from archaea with implications for meiotic recombination , 1997, Nature.
[67] S. Keeney,et al. Meiosis-Specific DNA Double-Strand Breaks Are Catalyzed by Spo11, a Member of a Widely Conserved Protein Family , 1997, Cell.
[68] P. Hasty,et al. A mutation in mouse rad51 results in an early embryonic lethal that is suppressed by a mutation in p53 , 1996, Molecular and cellular biology.
[69] C. Heyting,et al. Centromere and telomere movements during early meiotic prophase of mouse and man are associated with the onset of chromosome pairing , 1996, The Journal of cell biology.
[70] J. Sedat,et al. Direct Evidence of a Role for Heterochromatin in Meiotic Chromosome Segregation , 1996, Cell.
[71] G. Karpen,et al. Centric Heterochromatin and the Efficiency of Achiasmate Disjunction in Drosophila Female Meiosis , 1996, Science.
[72] K. Nakao,et al. Targeted disruption of the Rad51 gene leads to lethality in embryonic mice. , 1996, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[73] T. Petes,et al. Relationship between nuclease-hypersensitive sites and meiotic recombination hot spot activity at the HIS4 locus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae , 1996, Molecular and cellular biology.
[74] S. Keeney,et al. Communication between homologous chromosomes: genetic alterations at a nuclease‐hypersensitive site can alter mitotic chromatin structure at that site both in cis and in trans , 1996, Genes to cells : devoted to molecular & cellular mechanisms.
[75] G. Roeder,et al. Roles for two RecA homologs in promoting meiotic chromosome synapsis. , 1995, Genes & development.
[76] P. Sung,et al. DNA strand exchange mediated by a RAD51-ssDNA nucleoprotein filament with polarity opposite to that of RecA , 1995, Cell.
[77] A. Nicolas,et al. Changes in chromatin structure at recombination initiation sites during yeast meiosis. , 1994, The EMBO journal.
[78] Nancy Kleckner,et al. Chromosome pairing via multiple interstitial interactions before and during meiosis in yeast , 1994, Cell.
[79] M. Yanagida,et al. Telomere-led premeiotic chromosome movement in fission yeast. , 1994, Science.
[80] A. Villeneuve. A cis-acting locus that promotes crossing over between X chromosomes in Caenorhabditis elegans. , 1994, Genetics.
[81] T. Petes,et al. Transcription factors are required for the meiotic recombination hotspot at the HIS4 locus in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. , 1993, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[82] K. McKim,et al. Two types of sites required for meiotic chromosome pairing in Caenorhabditis elegans. , 1993, Genetics.
[83] B. Byers,et al. Stage-specific effects of X-irradiation on yeast meiosis. , 1993, Genetics.
[84] T. Petes,et al. Physical detection of heteroduplexes during meiotic recombination in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae , 1993, Molecular and cellular biology.
[85] N. M. Hollingsworth,et al. A conditional allele of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae HOP1 gene is suppressed by overexpression of two other meiosis-specific genes: RED1 and REC104. , 1993, Genetics.
[86] J. Vrána,et al. Evidence that intergenic spacer repeats of Drosophila melanogaster rRNA genes function as X-Y pairing sites in male meiosis, and a general model for achiasmatic pairing. , 1992, Genetics.
[87] N. Kleckner,et al. DMC1: A meiosis-specific yeast homolog of E. coli recA required for recombination, synaptonemal complex formation, and cell cycle progression , 1992, Cell.
[88] A. Shinohara,et al. Rad51 protein involved in repair and recombination in S. cerevisiae is a RecA-like protein , 1992, Cell.
[89] P. Detloff,et al. DNA-binding protein RAP1 stimulates meiotic recombination at the HIS4 locus in yeast. , 1991, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[90] R. Shenkar,et al. DNase I-hypersensitive sites and transcription factor-binding motifs within the mouse E beta meiotic recombination hot spot , 1991, Molecular and cellular biology.
[91] V. Guacci,et al. Distributive disjunction of authentic chromosomes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. , 1991, Genetics.
[92] R H Borts,et al. The frequency of meiotic recombination in yeast is independent of the number and position of homologous donor sequences: implications for chromosome pairing. , 1991, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[93] N. Kleckner,et al. A pathway for generation and processing of double-strand breaks during meiotic recombination in S. cerevisiae , 1990, Cell.
[94] G. Karpen,et al. Drosophila ribosomal RNA genes function as an X-Y pairing site during male meiosis , 1990, Cell.
[95] D. Brutlag,et al. Conversion and reciprocal exchange between tandem repeats in Drosophila melanogaster , 1989, Molecular and General Genetics MGG.
[96] K. McKim,et al. The effects of translocations on recombination frequency in Caenorhabditis elegans. , 1988, Genetics.
[97] G. H. Jones,et al. Synaptonemal complex spreading in Allium cepa and A. fistulosum , 1987, Chromosoma.
[98] A. Murray,et al. An alternative pathway for meiotic chromosome segregation in yeast. , 1986, Science.
[99] T. Petes,et al. Chromosomal translocations generated by high-frequency meiotic recombination between repeated yeast genes. , 1986, Genetics.
[100] R. W. Davis,et al. Meiotic disjunction of circular minichromosomes in yeast does not require DNA homology. , 1986, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[101] Henry Huang,et al. Homologous recombination in Escherichia coli: dependence on substrate length and homology. , 1986, Genetics.
[102] T. Petes,et al. High-frequency meiotic gene conversion between repeated genes on nonhomologous chromosomes in yeast. , 1985, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[103] S. Albini,et al. Synaptonemal complex-associated centromeres and recombination nodules in plant meiocytes prepared by an improved surface-spreading technique. , 1984, Experimental cell research.
[104] R. Hawley. Chromosomal sites necessary for normal levels of meiotic recombination in Drosophila melanogaster. I. Evidence for and mapping of the sites. , 1980, Genetics.
[105] R. F. Grell. DISTRIBUTIVE PAIRING: THE SIZE-DEPENDENT MECHANISM FOR REGULAR SEGREGATION OF THE FOURTH CHROMOSOMES IN DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER. , 1964, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[106] R. Grell. CHROMOSOME SIZE AT DISTRIBUTIVE PAIRING IN DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER FEMALES. , 1964, Genetics.
[107] C. W. Metz. Observations on spermatogenesis in Drosophila , 1926, Zeitschrift für Zellforschung und Mikroskopische Anatomie.
[108] C. W. Metz. Chromosome studies on the Diptera. II. The paired association of chromosomes in the Diptera, and its significance , 1916 .
[109] N. M. Stevens. A study of the germ cells of certain diptera, with reference to the heterochromosomes and the phenomena of synapsis , 1908 .
[110] K. Shepherd,et al. Chromosome arrangement and behaviour of two rye homologous telosomes at the onset of meiosis in disomic wheat-5RL addition lines with and without the Ph1 locus , 2004, Chromosome Research.
[111] N. Kleckner,et al. The leptotene-zygotene transition of meiosis. , 1998, Annual review of genetics.
[112] Yasushi Hiraoka,et al. Meiotic nuclear reorganization: switching the position of centromeres and telomeres in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe , 1997, The EMBO journal.
[113] L. Ross,et al. Effects of homology, size and exchange of the meiotic segregation of model chromosomes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. , 1996, Genetics.
[114] N. Kleckner,et al. Potential advantages of unstable interactions for pairing of chromosomes in meiotic, somatic, and premeiotic cells. , 1993, Cold Spring Harbor symposia on quantitative biology.
[115] B. McKee,et al. Promoter-containing ribosomal DNA fragments function as X-Y meiotic pairing sites in D. melanogaster males. , 1992, Developmental genetics.
[116] R. Hawley,et al. There are two mechanisms of achiasmate segregation in Drosophila females, one of which requires heterochromatic homology. , 1992, Developmental genetics.
[117] M. Dresser,et al. Genetic control of chromosome synapsis in yeast meiosis. , 1989, Genome.