Centromere Replication Timing Determines Different Forms of Genomic Instability in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Checkpoint Mutants During Replication Stress

被引:35
作者
Feng, Wenyi [1 ]
Bachant, Jeff [3 ]
Collingwood, David [2 ]
Raghuraman, M. K. [1 ]
Brewer, Bonita J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Dept Genome Sci, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[2] Univ Washington, Dept Math, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[3] Univ Calif Riverside, Dept Cell Biol & Neurosci, Riverside, CA 92521 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
CELL-CYCLE CHECKPOINT; SINGLE-STRANDED-DNA; BUDDING YEAST; S-PHASE; MITOTIC CHROMOSOMES; SPINDLE; PROTEIN; ANAPHASE; ORIGINS; KINETOCHORES;
D O I
10.1534/genetics.109.107508
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Yeast replication checkpoint mutants, lose viability following transient exposure to hydroxyurea, a replication-impeding drug. In all effort to understand the basis for this lethality, we discovered that different events are responsible for inviability in checkpoint-deficient cells harboring mutations ill the mec1 and rad53 genes. By monitoring genomewide replication dynamics of cells exposed to hydroxyurea, we show that cells with a checkpoint deficient allele of RAD53, rad53K227A, fail to duplicate centromeres. Following removal of the drug, however, rad53K227A cells recover substantial DNA replication, including replication through centromeres. Despite this recovery, the rad53K227A mutant fails to achieve biorientation of sister centromeres during recovery from hydroxyurea, leading to secondary activation of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC), aneuploidy, and lethal chromosome segregation errors. We demonstrate that cell lethality from this segregation defect could be partially remedied by reinforcing bipolar attachment. In contrast, cells with the mec1-1 sml1-1 mutations suffer from severely impaired replication resumption upon removal of hydroxyurea. mec1-1 sml1-1 cells call, however, duplicate at least some of their centromeres and achieve bipolar attachment, leading to abortive segregation and fragmentation of incompletely replicated chromosomes. Our results highlight the importance of replicating yeast centromeres early and reveal different mechanisms of cell death due to differences in replication fork progression.
引用
收藏
页码:1249 / 1260
页数:12
相关论文
共 36 条
[11]   Recovery from DNA replicational stress is the essential function of the S-phase checkpoint pathway [J].
Desany, BA ;
Alcasabas, AA ;
Bachant, JB ;
Elledge, SJ .
GENES & DEVELOPMENT, 1998, 12 (18) :2956-2970
[12]   Mapping yeast origins of replication via single-stranded DNA detection [J].
Feng, Wenyi ;
Raghuraman, M. K. ;
Brewer, Bonita J. .
METHODS, 2007, 41 (02) :151-157
[13]   Genomic mapping of single-stranded DNA in hydroxyurea-challenged yeasts identifies origins of replication [J].
Feng, WY ;
Collingwood, D ;
Boeck, ME ;
Fox, LA ;
Alvino, GM ;
Fangman, WL ;
Raghuraman, MK ;
Brewer, BJ .
NATURE CELL BIOLOGY, 2006, 8 (02) :148-U39
[14]   Establishing biorientation occurs with precocious separation of the sister kinetochores, but not the arms, in the early spindle of budding yeast [J].
Goshima, G ;
Yanagida, M .
CELL, 2000, 100 (06) :619-633
[15]   SEQUENTIAL FUNCTION OF GENE PRODUCTS RELATIVE TO DNA-SYNTHESIS IN YEAST-CELL CYCLE [J].
HARTWELL, LH .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1976, 104 (04) :803-817
[16]   Budding yeast mitotic chromosomes have an intrinsic bias to biorient on the spindle [J].
Indjeian, Vahan B. ;
Murray, Andrew W. .
CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2007, 17 (21) :1837-1846
[17]   The centromeric protein Sgo1 is required to sense lack of tension on mitotic chromosomes [J].
Indjeian, VB ;
Stern, BM ;
Murray, AW .
SCIENCE, 2005, 307 (5706) :130-133
[18]   DNA replication checkpoint prevents precocious chromosome segregation by regulating spindle behavior [J].
Krishnan, V ;
Nirantar, S ;
Crasta, K ;
Cheng, AYH ;
Surana, U .
MOLECULAR CELL, 2004, 16 (05) :687-700
[19]   ORC AND CDC6P INTERACT AND DETERMINE THE FREQUENCY OF INITIATION OF DNA-REPLICATION IN THE GENOME [J].
LIANG, C ;
WEINREICH, M ;
STILLMAN, B .
CELL, 1995, 81 (05) :667-676
[20]   The DNA replication checkpoint response stabilizes stalled replication forks [J].
Lopes, M ;
Cotta-Ramusino, C ;
Pellicioli, A ;
Liberi, G ;
Plevani, P ;
Muzi-Falconi, M ;
Newlon, CS ;
Foiani, M .
NATURE, 2001, 412 (6846) :557-561