Abstract
Proteins with potential roles in meiotic recombination often have essential or important functions during the mitotic cell cycle. In addition, proteins may have different functions at different times during meiosis. In such cases, it can be challenging to precisely determine protein function during meiosis using null or hypomorphic mutants. One example is the Sgs1-Top3-Rmi1 helicase-decatenase complex, which is required for normal vegetative growth and genome stability. In such cases, conditional loss-of-function mutants can be useful. In this chapter, we describe the construction of two types of conditional mutants, meiotic depletion alleles and auxin-induced degradation alleles, that allow protein depletion specifically during budding yeast meiosis, and illustrate their use with Sgs1. We also describe a modified method for the isolation of meiotic recombination intermediates that combines previous psoralen cross-linking and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide isolation methods.
