4.8 Article

Stabilisation of half MCM ring by Cdt1 during DNA insertion

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21932-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. MINECO [RYC-2015-17519, RYC-2014-15837, BFU2016-79927-P]
  2. Fundacio Bosch i Aymerich
  3. El crep de mi vida
  4. Konig Restaurants
  5. Rotary Club Banyoles

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This study shows the topological problem of DNA insertion in the stacking of OC with MCM-Cdt1, and the essential role of Cdt1's C-WHD in binding with Mcm6's crucial C-WHD for the latching between MCM-Cdt1 and OC.
Origin licensing ensures precise once per cell cycle replication in eukaryotic cells. The Origin Recognition Complex, Cdc6 and Cdt1 load Mcm2-7 helicase (MCM) into a double hexamer, bound around duplex DNA. The complex formed by ORC-Cdc6 bound to duplex DNA (OC) recruits the MCM-Cdt1 complex into the replication origins. Through the stacking of both complexes, the duplex DNA is inserted inside the helicase by an unknown mechanism. In this paper we show that the DNA insertion comes with a topological problem in the stacking of OC with MCM-Cdt1. Unless an essential, conserved C terminal winged helix domain (C-WHD) of Cdt1 is present, the MCM splits into two halves. The binding of this domain with the essential C-WHD of Mcm6, allows the latching between the MCM-Cdt1 and OC, through a conserved Orc5 AAA-lid interaction. Our work provides new insights into how DNA is inserted into the eukaryotic replicative helicase, through a series of synchronized events. During pre-Replication Complex, eukaryotic cells load two MCMs into a head-to-head Double Hexamer around duplex DNA (DH). Here the authors preRC assembly assay with purified proteins to reveal insights into S. cerevisiae's first steps that lead to the DH formation.

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