4.5 Article

sna41goal, a novel mutation causing G1/S arrest in fission yeast, is defective in a CDC45 homolog and interacts genetically with polα

Journal

MOLECULAR GENETICS AND GENOMICS
Volume 265, Issue 6, Pages 1039-1049

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s004380100499

Keywords

fission-yeast; cell cycle; initiation of DNA replication; prereplicative complex; DNA polymerase

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Proteins involved in the initiation of DNA replication play critical roles in the assembly and loading of replication complexes at replication origins. To gain further insight into the regulation of initiation, we screened in fission yeast for temperature-sensitive mutants which arrested at the G1/S boundary, and isolated nine mutants which arrested with a 1C DNA content at 36 degreesC. By linkage analysis, two complementation groups were identified which were not allelic to known G1 arrest mutations. One of the mutants isolated, sna41(goal), arrested with a G1 DNA content and expressed a pleiomorphic phenotype, i.e., a mixture of cut and cdc phenotypes, at 36 degreesC. The point of arrest was identified as after START but before the hydroxyurea-induced block, by taking advantage of the mutant rad26.a14, which has a defect in an early S phase-specific checkpoint, and by performing reciprocal shift experiments. sna41(goal) is allelic to sna41(+), which is homologous to the CDC45 gene of budding yeast, and the mutation lies in a motif that is highly conserved in Cdc45-related proteins. The temperature sensitivity of the sna41(goal) mutant can be suppressed to some extent by ts mutations in polo. Our genetic results are consistent with a model in which Cdc45 plays crucial roles in the assembly of the replication apparatus at replication origins.

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