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1.
Vegetative cells carrying the new temperature-sensitive mutation cdc40 arrest at the restrictive temperature with a medial nuclear division phenotype. DNA replication is observed under these conditions, but most cells remain sensitive to hydroxyurea and do not complete the ongoing cell cycle if the drug is present during release from the temperature block. It is suggested that the cdc40 lesion affects an essential function in DNA synthesis. Normal meiosis is observed at the permissive temperature in cdc40 homozygotes. At the restrictive temperature, a full round of premeiotic DNA replication is observed, but neither commitment to recombination nor later meiotic events occur. Meiotic cells that are already committed to the recombination process at the permissive temperature do not complete it if transferred to the restrictive temperature before recombination is realized. These temperature shift-up experiments demonstrate that the CDC40 function is required for the completion of recombination events, as well as for the earlier stage of recombination commitment. Temperature shift-down experiments with cdc40 homozygotes suggest that meiotic segregation depends on the final events of recombination rather than on commitment to recombination.  相似文献   

2.
A Blank  L A Loeb 《Biochemistry》1991,30(32):8092-8096
DNA polymerase III of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been reported to be encoded at the CDC2 locus based on two observations. First, the CDC2 gene has homology to known DNA polymerase genes [Boulet et al. (1989) EMBO J. 8, 1849-1854], and second, the mutants cdc2-1 and cdc2-2 yield little or no DNA polymerase III activity in vitro [Boulet et al. (1989); Sitney et al. (1989) Cell 56, 599-605]. We describe here the isolation of temperature-sensitive DNA polymerase III from cdc2-2 strains. Our results provide direct experimental confirmation of the previously inferred gene/enzyme relationship and verify the conclusion that DNA polymerase III is required to replicate the genome. We isolated DNA polymerase III from two cdc2-2 strains, one containing the wild-type allele for DNA polymerase I (CDC17) and the other a mutant DNA polymerase I allele (cdc17-1). Yields from cdc2-2 cells of both DNA polymerase III activity and an associated 3'-5'-exonuclease activity [exonuclease III; Bauer et al. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 917-924] were decreased relative to yields from CDC2 cells. DNA polymerase III activity from cdc2-2 strains is thermolabile, displaying at least a 4-fold reduction in half-life at 44 degrees C. The activity is also labile at 37 degrees C, a temperature which is restrictive for growth of cdc2-2 but not CDC2 strains. At 23 degrees C, a temperature which is permissive for growth of both cdc2-2 and CDC2 strains, the mutant and wild-type DNA polymerase III activities display equal stability. These observations provide a demonstrable biochemical basis for the thermosensitive phenotype of cdc2-2 cells.  相似文献   

3.
The CDC13 gene encodes a protein that binds to the G-rich single-strand at yeast telomeres, and serves as a regulator of telomere replication. Cdc13 interacts with Est1 and DNA polymerase alpha, and cells carrying the temperature-sensitive allele cdc13-1 cannot complete telomere replication at the restrictive temperature and possess long telomeres. We attempted to isolate and characterize genes that interact with CDC13, in order to clarify the molecular mechanisms of telomere replication. A STM1 cDNA was isolated in a two-hybrid screen using CDC13 as a bait. The temperature-sensitive growth phenotype and the alteration in telomere size in cdc13-1 cells were corrected by introduction of the STM1 gene on a multicopy vector, but the extended G-rich single-strand overhangs which are also characteristic in the cdc13-1 mutant were not affected. Furthermore, we found that multiple copies of SGS1, a gene encoding a helicase that can unwind guanine quadruplexes, inhibited suppression of the cdc13-1 phenotype by STM1. We also demonstrate that a fusion protein consisting of the N-terminal region of Cdc13 and the C-terminal region of Stm1 (which shows similarity to the beta-subunit of the telomere binding complex in Oxytricha) could complement a cdc13 disruptant. Although STM1 itself is not essential for telomere replication, our findings suggest that STM1 genetically interacts with CDC13 to maintain telomere structure.  相似文献   

4.
Two roles for the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Cdc13 protein at the telomere have previously been characterized: it recruits telomerase to the telomere and protects chromosome ends from degradation. In a synthetic lethality screen with YKU70, the 70-kDa subunit of the telomere-associated Yku heterodimer, we identified a new mutation in CDC13, cdc13-4, that points toward an additional regulatory function of CDC13. Although CDC13 is an essential telomerase component in vivo, no replicative senescence can be observed in cdc13-4 cells. Telomeres of cdc13-4 mutants shorten for about 150 generations until they reach a stable level. Thus, in cdc13-4 mutants, telomerase seems to be inhibited at normal telomere length but fully active at short telomeres. Furthermore, chromosome end structure remains protected in cdc13-4 mutants. Progressive telomere shortening to a steady-state level has also been described for mutants of the positive telomere length regulator TEL1. Strikingly, cdc13-4/tel1Delta double mutants display shorter telomeres than either single mutant after 125 generations and a significant amplification of Y' elements after 225 generations. Therefore CDC13, TEL1, and the Yku heterodimer seem to represent distinct pathways in telomere length maintenance. Whereas several CDC13 mutants have been reported to display elongated telomeres indicating that Cdc13p functions in negative telomere length control, we report a new mutation leading to shortened and eventually stable telomeres. Therefore we discuss a key role of CDC13 not only in telomerase recruitment but also in regulating telomerase access, which might be modulated by protein-protein interactions acting as inhibitors or activators of telomerase activity.  相似文献   

5.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Cdc13p is a single-stranded TG(1-3) DNA binding protein that protects telomeres and maintains telomere length. A mutant allele of CDC13, cdc13-1, causes accumulation of single-stranded TG(1-3) DNA near telomeres along with a G(2)/M cell cycle arrest at non-permissive temperatures. We report here that when the single-stranded TG(1-3) DNA is masked by its binding proteins, such as S. cerevisiae Gbp2p or Schizosaccharomyces pombe Tcg1, the growth arrest phenotype of cdc13-1 is rescued. Mutations on Gbp2p that disrupt its binding to the single-stranded TG(1-3) DNA render the protein unable to complement the defects of cdc13-1. These results indicate that the presence of a single-stranded TG(1-3) tail in cdc13-1 cells serves as the signal for the cell cycle checkpoint. Moreover, the binding activity of Gbp2p to single-stranded TG(1-3) DNA appears to be associated with its ability to restore the telomere-lengthening phenotype in cdc13-1 cells. These results indicate that Gbp2p is involved in modulating telomere length.  相似文献   

6.
To investigate the relationship between the DNA replication apparatus and the control of telomere length, we examined the effects of several DNA replication mutations on telomere length in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We report that a mutation in the structural gene for the large subunit of DNA replication factor C (cdc44/rfc1) causes striking increases in telomere length. A similar effect is seen with mutations in only one other DNA replication gene: the structural gene for DNA polymerase alpha (cdc17/pol1) (M.J. Carson and L. Hartwell, Cell 42:249-257, 1985). For both genes, the telomere elongation phenotype is allele specific and appears to correlate with the penetrance of the mutations. Furthermore, fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis reveals that those alleles that cause elongation also exhibit a slowing of DNA replication. To determine whether elongation is mediated by telomerase or by slippage of the DNA polymerase, we created cdc17-1 mutants carrying deletions of the gene encoding the RNA component of telomerase (TLC1). cdc17-1 strains that would normally undergo telomere elongation failed to do so in the absence of telomerase activity. This result implies that telomere elongation in cdc17-1 mutants is mediated by the action of telomerase. Since DNA replication involves transfer of the nascent strand from polymerase alpha to replication factor C (T. Tsurimoto and B. Stillman, J. Biol. Chem. 266:1950-1960, 1991; T. Tsurimoto and B. Stillman, J. Biol. Chem. 266:1961-1968, 1991; S. Waga and B. Stillman, Nature [London] 369:207-212, 1994), one possibility is that this step affects the regulation of telomere length.  相似文献   

7.
8.
CDC37 is required for p60v-src activity in yeast.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Mutations in genes encoding the molecular chaperones Hsp90 and Ydj1p suppress the toxicity of the protein tyrosine kinase p60v-src in yeast by reducing its levels or its kinase activity. We describe isolation and characterization of novel p60v-src-resistant, temperature-sensitive cdc37 mutants, cdc37-34 and cdc37-17, which produce less p60v-src than the parental wild-type strain at 23 degrees C. However, p60v-src levels are not low enough to account for the resistance of these strains. Asynchronously growing cdc37-34 and cdc37-17 mutants arrest in G1 and G2/M when shifted from permissive temperatures (23 degrees C) to the restrictive temperature (37 degrees C), but hydroxyurea-synchronized cdc37-34 and cdc37-17 mutants arrest in G2/M when released from the hydroxyurea block and shifted from 23 to 37 degrees C. The previously described temperature-sensitive cdc37-1 mutant is p60v-src-sensitive and produces wild-type amounts of p60v-src at permissive temperatures but becomes p60v-src-resistant at its restrictive temperature, 38 degrees C. In all three cdc37 mutants, inactivation of Cdc37p by incubation at 38 degrees C reduces p60v-src-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation of yeast proteins to low or undetectable levels. Also, p60v-src levels are enriched in urea-solubilized extracts and depleted in detergent-solubilized extracts of all three cdc37 mutants prepared from cells incubated at the restrictive temperature. These results suggest that Cdc37p is required for maintenance of p60v-src in a soluble, biologically active form.  相似文献   

9.
Addition of exogenous cAMP to cultures of the start mutant cdc25-1 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae shifted to restrictive temperature causes a partial reversion of the mutated phenotype, with a marked increase of the percentage of budded cells. This effect is coupled to a progression in the cell cycle, as demonstrated by DNA histograms obtained by flow cytometry. Moreover cdc25 cells have a high intracellular cAMP content also at restrictive temperature, and no change in the cAMP content was seen during a transition from restrictive to permissive temperature. These data suggest that CDC25 gene product allows cell proliferation by interacting with a cAMP-mediated mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
Distinguishing telomeres from DNA double strand breaks is critical for genome stability. In S. cerevisiae, the Cdc13 single-strand telomere binding protein is critical for protecting chromosome ends. The C-rich telomere strand is lost at high temperatures in cdc13-1 strains, leading to activation of the DNA damage checkpoint and cell inviability. Through a screen performed to identify activities involved in telomere C-strand loss, we identified two new rad24 alleles. Rad24 is an alternate Rfc1 subunit, functioning to load the 9-1-1 checkpoint clamp. In each rad24 allele, a transposon inserted within the RAD24 coding region leads to expression of different carboxyl-terminal portions of Rad24, deleting or truncating the amino-terminus. We show that an intact Rad24 amino-terminus is necessary for its checkpoint function. Interestingly, the initial cdc13-1 rad24-2 strains grew at 36Ã?Â?Å¡C, but the extent of suppression associated with rad24-2 weakened in serial backcrosses, and cdc13-1 segregants from these crosses showed a modest increase in temperature resistance. Moreover, while a RAD24 plasmid suppressed the checkpoint defect in the initial cdc13-1 rad24-2 strain, the temperature resistance was only partially suppressed. These data suggest that the TG1-3 amplification observed in this strain contributes to the suppression phenotype. By recreating the rad24-2 allele in a strain with normal telomeres, we find that, relative to the rad24-Ã?¢Ã?Â?†allele, rad24-2 increases the frequency of obtaining cdc13-1 cells capable of growth at high temperatures. Our hypothesis is that the Rad24-2 truncation protein affects telomere structure or recombination in a manner distinct from rad24-Ã?¢Ã?Â?†.  相似文献   

11.
Conditional ligase-deficient mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were more sensitive than their parental (CDC9) strain to dose-dependent killing by bleomycin, even when mutant cells were pregrown and exposed to the antibiotic at permissive temperatures. Pretreatment incubation at the restrictive temperature (37 degrees C) under growing or nongrowing conditions enhanced bleomycin killing of both cdc9-1 and cdc9-9 mutants. This sensitization could be relieved by incubation at the permissive temperature before treatment.  相似文献   

12.
The core assumption driving the use of conditional loss-of-function reagents such as temperature-sensitive mutations is that the resulting phenotype(s) are solely due to depletion of the mutant protein under nonpermissive conditions. However, prior published data, combined with observations presented here, challenge the generality of this assumption at least for telomere biology: for both wild-type yeast and strains bearing null mutations in telomere protein complexes, there is an additional phenotypic consequence when cells are grown above 34°. We propose that this synthetic phenotype is due to a naturally thermolabile activity that confers a telomere-specific defect, which we call the Tmp(-) phenotype. This prompted a re-examination of commonly used cdc13-ts and stn1-ts mutations, which indicates that these alleles are instead hypomorphic mutations that behave as apparent temperature-sensitive mutations due to the additive effects of the Tmp(-) phenotype. We therefore generated new cdc13-ts reagents, which are nonpermissive below 34°, to allow examination of cdc13-depleted phenotypes in the absence of this temperature-dependent defect. A return-to-viability experiment following prolonged incubation at 32°, 34°, and 36° with one of these new cdc13-ts alleles argues that the accelerated inviability previously observed at 36° in cdc13-1 rad9-Δ mutant strains is a consequence of the Tmp(-) phenotype. Although this study focused on telomere biology, viable null mutations that confer inviability at 36° have been identified for multiple cellular pathways. Thus, phenotypic analysis of other aspects of yeast biology may similarly be compromised at high temperatures by pathway-specific versions of the Tmp(-) phenotype.  相似文献   

13.
We investigated the relationship in Saccharomyces cerevisiae between the cell cycle start function, CDC25, and two mutants defining components of the cAMP pathway. The thermolabile adenylate cyclase mutant cyr1-2(ts) is phenotypically similar to the temperature-sensitive mutant cdc25(ts) in that both mutants, when shifted to the restrictive temperature, arrest in G1 of the cell cycle and permit the initiation of meiosis and sporulation. The mutant bcy1 [a lesion resulting in a low level of regulatory (R) subunit and a high level of active, catalytic (C) subunit of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase] suppresses the temperature-sensitive phenotype of cyr1-2(ts) and confers an asporogenous phenotype. We found that cdc25(ts) complemented cyr1-2(ts), and, unlike cyr1-2(ts), was not suppressible by bcy1, demonstrating that CYR1 and CDC25 must encode different functions. Also our results indicate that CDC25 does not encode the R subunit of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase. In addition, although the cdc25(ts)bcy1 double mutant was temperature sensitive like cdc25(ts), we found that the cdc25(ts)bcy1 homozygous diploid was asporogenous like bcy1/bcy1. The inability of the cdc25(ts)bcy1 double mutant to sporulate demonstrated that CDC25 does not encode the C subunit of the cAMP kinase, and indicated that the CDC25 function modulates the cAMP pathway to control meiosis and sporulation. Further, the temperature-sensitive phenotype of the double mutant, and hence the inability of bcy1 to suppress cdc25(ts), suggested that a second CDC25 cell cycle function exists which is independent of the cAMP pathway.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Spontaneous revertants of the cdc30 mutation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae simultaneously regained the ability to grow and divide at 36.5 degrees C on glucose-containing media along with a more thermostable phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI). An independently isolated allele of cdc30 gave a similar phenotype to that previously described including temperature-sensitivity of PGI. Isoelectric focussing allowed the separation of two isoenzymes of PGI. These results all support the idea that two genes--PGI1 and CDC30--are responsible for PGI activity in yeast. Diploid strains homozygous for the cdc30 mutation sporulated poorly in potassium acetate irrespective of whether the cells had previously been cultured at a temperature that was permissive or restrictive for cell cycle progression. This was not surprising because a strain defective in PGI would not be expected to be able to complete the gluconeogenic events of sporulation.  相似文献   

15.
Mutations in either the CDC36 or CDC39 gene cause yeast cells to arrest in G1 of the cell cycle at the same point as treatment with mating pheromone. We demonstrate here that strains harboring temperature-sensitive mutations in CDC36 or CDC39 activate expression of the pheromone-inducible gene FUS1 when shifted to nonpermissive temperature. We show further that cell-cycle arrest and induction of FUS1 are dependent on known components of the mating factor response pathway, the STE genes. Thus, the G1-arrest phenotype of cdc36 and cdc39 mutants results from activation of the mating factor response pathway. The CDC36 and CDC39 gene products behave formally as negative elements in the response pathway: they are required to block response in the absence of pheromone. Epistasis analysis of mutants defective in CDC36 or CDC39 and different STE genes demonstrates that activation requires the response pathway G protein and suggests that CDC36 and CDC39 products may control synthesis or function of the G alpha subunit.  相似文献   

16.
Effects of the Mitotic Cell-Cycle Mutation cdc4 on Yeast Meiosis   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
The mitotic cell-cycle mutation cdc4 has been reported to block the initiation of nuclear DNA replication and the separation of spindle plaques after their replication. Meiosis in cdc4/cdc4 diploids is normal at the permissive temperature (25 degrees) and is arrested at the first division (one-nucleus stage) at the restrictive temperature (34 degrees or 36 degrees). Arrested cells at 34 degrees show a high degree of commitment to recombination (at least 50% of the controls) but no haploidization, while cells arrested at 36 degrees are not committed to recombination. Meiotic cells arrested at 34 degrees show a delayed and reduced synthesis of DNA (at most 40% of the control), at least half of which is probably mitochondrial. It is suggested that recombination commitment does not depend on the completion of nuclear premeiotic DNA replication in sporulation medium.--Transfer of cdc4/cdc4 cells to the restrictive temperature at the onset of sporulation produces a uniform phenotype of arrest at a 1-nucleus morphology. On the other hand, shifts of the meiotic cells to the restrictive temperature at later times produce two additional phenotypes of arrest, thus suggesting that the function of cdc4 is required at several points in meiosis (at least at three different times).  相似文献   

17.
Biochemical and genetic experiments have shown that the PRP17 gene of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes a protein that plays a role during the second catalytic step of the splicing reaction. It was found recently that PRP17 is identical to the cell division cycle CDC40 gene. cdc40 mutants arrest at the restrictive temperature after the completion of DNA replication. Although the PRP17/CDC40 gene product is essential only at elevated temperatures, splicing intermediates accumulate in prp17 mutants even at the permissive temperature. In this report we describe extensive genetic interactions between PRP17/CDC40 and the PRP8 gene. PRP8 encodes a highly conserved U5 snRNP protein required for spliceosome assembly and for both catalytic steps of the splicing reaction. We show that mutations in the PRP8 gene are able to suppress the temperature-sensitive growth phenotype and the splicing defect conferred by the absence of the Prp17 protein. In addition, these mutations are capable of suppressing certain alterations in the conserved PyAG trinucleotide at the 3' splice junction, as detected by an ACT1-CUP1 splicing reporter system. Moreover, other PRP8 alleles exhibit synthetic lethality with the absence of Prp17p and show a reduced ability to splice an intron bearing an altered 3' splice junction. On the basis of these findings, we propose a model for the mode of interaction between the Prp8 and Prp17 proteins during the second catalytic step of the splicing reaction.  相似文献   

18.
A detailed kinetic analysis of the cell cycle of cdc25-1, RAS2Val-19, or cdc25-1/RAS2Val-19 mutants during exponential growth is presented. At the permissive temperature (24 degrees C), cdc25-1 cells show a longer G1/unbudded phase of the cell cycle and have a smaller critical cell size required for budding without changing the growth rate in comparison to an isogenic wild type. The RAS2Val-19 mutation efficiently suppresses the ts growth defect of the cdc25-1 mutant at 36 degrees C and the increase of G1 phase at 24 degrees C. Moreover, it causes a marked increase of the critical cell mass required to enter into a new cell division cycle compared with that of the wild type. Since the critical cell mass is physiologically modulated by nutritional conditions, we have also studied the behavior of these mutants in different media. The increase in cell size caused by the RAS2Val-19 mutation is evident in all tested growth conditions, while the effect of cdc25-1 is apparently more pronounced in rich culture media. CDC25 and RAS2 gene products have been showed to control cell growth by regulating the cyclic AMP metabolic pathway. Experimental evidence reported herein suggests that the modulation of the critical cell size by CDC25 and RAS2 may involve adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

19.
Cdc13 performs an essential function in telomere end protection in budding yeast. Here, we analyze the consequences on telomere dynamics of cdc13-induced telomeric DNA damage in proliferating cells. Checkpoint-deficient cdc13-1 cells accumulated DNA damage and eventually senesced. However, these telomerase-proficient cells could survive by using homologous recombination but, contrary to telomerase-deficient cells, did so without prior telomere shortening. Strikingly, homologous recombination in cdc13-1 mec3, as well as in telomerase-deficient cdc13-1 cells, which were Rad52- and Rad50-dependent but Rad51-independent, exclusively amplified the TG(1-3) repeats. This argues that not only short telomeres are substrates for type II recombination. The Cdc13-1 mutant protein harbored a defect in its association with Stn1 and Ten1 but also an additional, unknown, defect that could not be cured by expressing a Cdc13-1- Ten1-Stn1 fusion. We propose that Cdc13 prevents telomere uncapping and inhibits recombination between telomeric sequences through a pathway distinct from and complementary to that used by telomerase.  相似文献   

20.
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