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1.
In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, DNA topoisomerases I and II can functionally substitute for each other in removing positive and negative DNA supercoils. Yeast Delta top1 top2(ts) mutants grow slowly and present structural instability in the genome; over half of the rDNA repeats are excised in the form of extrachromosomal rings, and small circular minichromosomes strongly multimerize. Because these traits can be reverted by the extrachromosomal expression of either eukaryotic topoisomerase I or II, their origin is attributed to the persistence of unconstrained DNA supercoiling. Here, we examine whether the expression of the Escherichia coli topA gene, which encodes the bacterial topoisomerase I that removes only negative supercoils, compensates the phenotype of Delta top1 top2(ts) yeast cells. We found that Delta top1 top2(ts) mutants expressing E. coli topoisomerase I grow faster and do not manifest rDNA excision and minichromosome multimerization. Furthermore, the recombination frequency in repeated DNA sequences, which is increased by nearly two orders of magnitude in Delta top1 top2(ts) mutants relative to the parental TOP+ cells, is restored to normal levels when the bacterial topoisomerase is expressed. These results indicate that the suppression of mitotic hyper-recombination caused by eukaryotic topoisomerases I and II is effected mainly by the relaxation of negative rather than positive supercoils; they also highlight the potential of unconstrained negative supercoiling to promote homologous recombination.  相似文献   

2.
M F Christman  F S Dietrich  G R Fink 《Cell》1988,55(3):413-425
We have found that mitotic recombination within the S. cerevisiae rDNA cluster (200 tandemly repeated 9.1 kb units) is strongly suppressed and that this suppression requires the combined action of DNA topoisomerases I and II. Strains with a null mutation in the TOP1 gene (encoding topoisomerase I) or a ts mutation in the TOP2 gene (encoding topoisomerase II) grown at a semipermissive temperature show 50- to 200-fold higher frequencies of mitotic recombination in rDNA relative to TOP+ controls. Suppression of recombination is specific to the rDNA because the recombination frequency at another tandem array, the CUP1 locus, at a simple HIS4 duplication, or among dispersed repeats (MAT and HML or HMR) is not elevated in top1 or top2 mutants. The high frequency of mitotic recombination within the rDNA cluster in topoisomerase mutants shows that both TOP1 and TOP2 are required for suppression of recombination in this region of the genome.  相似文献   

3.
The TOP3 gene of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was postulated to encode a DNA topoisomerase, based on its sequence homology to Escherichia coli DNA topoisomerase I and the suppression of the poor growth phenotype of top3 mutants by the expression of the E. coli enzyme (Wallis, J.W., Chrebet, G., Brodsky, G., Golfe, M., and Rothstein, R. (1989) Cell 58, 409-419). We have purified the yeast TOP3 gene product to near homogeneity as a 74-kDA protein from yeast cells lacking DNA topoisomerase I and overexpressing a plasmid-borne TOP3 gene linked to a phosphate-regulated yeast PHO5 gene promoter. The purified protein possesses a distinct DNA topoisomerase activity: similar to E. coli DNA topoisomerases I and III, it partially relaxes negatively but not positively supercoiled DNA. Several experiments, including the use of a negatively supercoiled heteroduplex DNA containing a 29-nucleotide single-stranded loop, indicate that the activity has a strong preference for single-stranded DNA. A protein-DNA covalent complex in which the 74-kDa protein is linked to a 5' DNA phosphoryl group has been identified, and the nucleotide sequences of 30 sites of DNA-protein covalent complex formation have been determined. These sequences differ from those recognized by E. coli DNA topoisomerase I but resemble those recognized by E. coli DNA topoisomerase III. Based on these results, the yeast TOP3 gene product can formally be termed S. cerevisiae DNA topoisomerase III. Analysis of supercoiling of intracellular yeast plasmids in various DNA topoisomerase mutants indicates that yeast DNA topoisomerase III has at most a weak activity in relaxing negatively supercoiled double-stranded DNA in vivo, in accordance with the characteristics of the purified enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
In topoisomerase-deficient yeast cells, we have found that circular minichromosomes are present as broad distributions of multimeric forms, which consist of tandemly repeated copies of their monomeric sequences. This phenomenon selectively occurs in Deltatop1 cells, and is highly magnified in double mutant Deltatop1 top2-4 cells. No multimers are observed in single mutant top2-4 or Deltatop3 cells, or in Deltatop1 cells that express a plasmid-borne TOP1 gene. Interconversion among multimeric forms takes place rapidly in double mutant Deltatop1 top2-4 cells, and the multimeric distributions are readily reverted to the monomeric form when a plasmid-borne TOP1 gene is expressed from an inducible promoter. These observations are a new example of the interplay between DNA topology and genome stability, and suggest that the cell capacity to modulate DNA supercoiling is limited when DNA is organized in small topological domains. Yeast minichromosome multimerization provides an appropriate system in which to study mechanistic aspects of DNA recombination.  相似文献   

5.
We have examined the roles of eukaryotic DNA topoisomerases I and II in DNA replication by the use of a set of four isogenic strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae that are TOP1+ TOP2+, TOP1+ top2 ts, delta top1 TOP2+, and delta top1 top2 ts. Cells synchronized by treatment with the alpha-mating factor, or by cycles of feeding and starvation, were released from cell-cycle arrest, and the size distribution of DNA chains that were synthesized after the cells reentered the S-phase was determined as a function of time. The results indicate that synthesis of short DNA chains several thousand nucleotides in length can initiate in the absence of both topoisomerases, but their further elongation requires at least one of the two topoisomerases. Inactivation of DNA topoisomerase II does not alter significantly the time dependence of the patterns of nascent DNA chain synthesis, which is consistent with the notion that the requirement of this enzyme for viability is due to its essential role during mitosis, when pairs of intertwined newly replicated chromosomes are being segregated. The absence of DNA topoisomerase I leads to a temporary delay in the extension of the short DNA chains; this delay in chain elongation is also reflected in the rate of total DNA synthesis in the delta top1 mutant during the early S-phase. Thus, in wild-type cells, DNA topoisomerase I is probably the major replication swivel. The patterns of DNA synthesis in asynchronously grown delta top1 top2 ts cells at permissive and non-permissive temperatures are also consistent with the above conclusions.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The structural gene for DNA topoisomerase II from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been cloned. The clones were selected from a YEp13 plasmid bank of yeast DNA by complementing a temperature-sensitive mutation (top2-1) in the topoisomerase II gene, TOP2. Chromosomal integrants of the clone were derived by homologous recombination in strains lacking the 2 mu circle plasmid. Genetic analysis of these integrants indicates that we have cloned the TOP2 gene and not an extragenic suppressor. A YEp13-TOP2 hybrid plasmid integrant was used to localize the TOP2 gene to the left arm of chromosome XIV by the 2 mu circle-directed marker loss method. Results from standard meiotic mapping experiments indicate that TOP2 is about 16 centi-Morgans to the centromere proximal side of MET4. Northern blot analysis of TOP2 RNA isolated from a wild-type strain and from an rna2 mutant shows the RNA to be 4.5 kb long in both cases, thus indicating that the TOP2 gene has no large introns.  相似文献   

8.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae TOP3 gene encodes the type IA topoisomerase (Top3p) that is highly conserved in evolution. Deletion of TOP3 leads to a reduction in cell viability, hyper-recombination between repetitive DNA sequences, and abnormalities in both cell cycle progression and responses to DNA damaging agents. Deletion of SGS1, encoding the sole RecQ family helicase in S. cerevisiae, strongly suppresses the phenotypic effects of loss of TOP3 function. Here, we show that many of the adverse phenotypic effects of TOP3 deletion can also be partially alleviated by disruption of homologous recombination (HR) functions. This genetic interaction is seen both in strains deleted for TOP3 and in wild-type strains over-expressing a dominant-negative Top3p mutant form that confers a top3-like phenotype. Moreover, we show that this genetic interaction is conserved in the distantly-related fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Our results implicate topoisomerase III enzymes in recombination repair events required for cellular protection against DNA damaging agents and DNA replication inhibitors.  相似文献   

9.
The Ustilago maydis genomic TOP1 gene encoding DNA topoisomerase I was cloned by amplifying a gene fragment using the polymerase chain reaction, and using this fragment to search a genomic DNA library by hybridization. The predicted peptide sequence exhibited 30-40% identity to other eukaryotic TOP1 genes, yet differed in several features. First, an unusually long acidic region was identified near the amino terminus (28/29 residues are acidic), which resembles other nucleolar peptide motifs. Second, an atypical carboxy-terminal 'tail', absent in other TOP1 genes, followed the active site tyrosine residue. A top1 gene disruption mutant was constructed by replacing the genomic TOP1 gene, with a top1::HygR null allele. This mutant lost the abundant topoisomerase I activity evident in wild-type U.maydis, and displayed a subtle coloration phenotype evident during cell senescence.  相似文献   

10.
T Uemura  K Morikawa    M Yanagida 《The EMBO journal》1986,5(9):2355-2361
We have determined the complete nucleotide sequence of a 5.3-kb long genomic DNA fragment of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe that encodes DNA topoisomerase II. It contains a 4293 bp long single open reading frame. The predicted polypeptide has 1431 residues (mol. wt 162,000) and shows three characteristic domains; the large C-terminal region, which consists of alternating acidic-basic stretches and might be a chromatin-binding domain, the NH2 half domain homologous to the ATP-binding gyrB subunit of bacterial gyrase and the central-to-latter part which is homologous to the NH2 domain of the catalytic gyrA subunit, suggesting a possible evolutionary consequence of the gene fusion of the bacterial gyrase subunits into the eucaryotic DNA topoisomerase II gene. We have found that the cloned fission yeast TOP2 gene can complement the budding yeast top2 mutation, although the fission yeast TOP2 protein sequence is only 50% homologous to the recently determined sequence of budding yeast (J.C. Wang, personal communication). Conversely, the budding yeast TOP2 gene can complement the fission yeast top2 mutations, indicating that their DNA topoisomerase II genes are functionally exchangeable.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Several cDNA clones encoding mouse DNA topoisomerase II were obtained from a mouse spermatocyte cDNA library and the entire coding sequence of the gene was determined. The mouse DNA topoisomerase II consists of 1528 amino acids with a molecular weight of 173 kDa. It shares significant homologies with the other eucaryotic enzymes, although species-specific sequences are observed in their highly charged C-terminal regions. The complete mouse TOP2 cDNA was put under yeast GAL1 promoter and examined for complementation of top2ts mutation in S.cerevisiae. We found that the cloned mouse gene could rescue the temperature-sensitive top2ts mutation, depending on its induction by galactose. The functional expression of the mouse DNA topoisomerase II in yeast was further confirmed by enzymatic assays and by immunological methods with antibodies specific for the mouse enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells that are mutated at TOP3, a gene that encodes a protein homologous to bacterial type I topoisomerases, have a variety of defects, including reduced growth rate, altered gene expression, blocked sporulation, and elevated rates of mitotic recombination at several loci. The rate of ectopic recombination between two unlinked, homologous loci, SAM1 and SAM2, is sixfold higher in cells containing a top3 null mutation than in wild-type cells. Mutations in either of the two other known topoisomerase genes in S. cerevisiae, TOP1 and TOP2, do not affect the rate of recombination between the SAM genes. The top3 mutation also changes the distribution of recombination events between the SAM genes, leading to the appearance of novel deletion-insertion events in which conversion tracts extend beyond the coding sequence, replacing the DNA flanking the 3' end of one SAM gene with nonhomologous DNA flanking the 3' end of the other. The effects of the top3 null mutation on recombination are dependent on the presence of an intact RAD1 excision repair gene, because both the rate of SAM ectopic gene conversion and the conversion tract length were reduced in rad1 top3 mutant cells compared with top3 mutants. These results suggest that a RAD1-dependent function is involved in the processing of damaged DNA that results from the loss of Top3 activity, targeting such DNA for repair by recombination.  相似文献   

14.
Topoisomerases catalyse changes in the topological state of DNA and are required for many aspects of DNA metabolism. While the functions of topoisomerases I and II in eukaryotes are well established, the role of topoisomerase III remains poorly defined. We have identified a gene in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, designated top3 (+), which shows significant sequence similarity to genes encoding topoisomerase III enzymes in other eukaryotic species. In common with murine TOP3 alpha, but in contrast to Saccharomyces cerevisiae TOP3, the S.pombe top3 (+)gene is essential for long-term cell viability. Fission yeast haploid spores containing a disrupted top3 (+)gene germinate successfully, but then undergo only a limited number of cell divisions. Analysis of these top3 mutants revealed evidence of aberrant mitotic chromosome segregation, including the 'cut' phenotype, where septation is completed prior to nuclear division. Consistent with the existence of an intimate association (originally identified in S.cerevisiae ) between topoisomerase III and DNA helicases of the RecQ family, deletion of the rqh1 (+)gene encoding the only known RecQ helicase in S.pombe suppresses lethality in top3 mutants. This conservation of genetic interaction between two widely diverged yeasts suggests that the RecQ family helicases encoded by the Bloom's and Werner's syndrome genes are likely to act in concert with topoisomerase III isozymes in human cells. Our data are consistent with a model in which the association of a RecQ helicase and topoisomerase III is important for facilitating decatenation of late stage replicons to permit faithful chromosome segregation during anaphase.  相似文献   

15.
Smith SF  Metcalfe JA  Elgar G 《Gene》2001,265(1-2):195-204
Eukaryotic DNA topoisomerase I manipulates the higher order structures of DNA. Only one functional topoisomerase 1 (top1) gene has previously been identified in any individual eukaryotic species. Here we report the identification and characterisation of two top1 genes in the pufferfish, Fugu rubripes. This shows that the copy number of top1, like that of other topoisomerases, may vary between eukaryotes. Both Fugu genes have 21 exons; a gene structure similar to that of human TOP1. Despite this conservation of structure, and some non-coding elements, both genes are less than a tenth of the size of the human gene. Sequence and phylogenetic analyses have shown that this duplication is ancient and also affects other species in the fish lineage.  相似文献   

16.
17.
W. Thomas  R. M. Spell  M. E. Ming    C. Holm 《Genetics》1991,128(4):703-716
We have undertaken a genetic analysis of heat-sensitive and cold-sensitive mutations in TOP2, the gene encoding yeast DNA topoisomerase II. Deletion mapping was used to localize 14 heat-sensitive and four cold-sensitive top2 mutations created by a method biased toward mutations in the 3' two-thirds of the gene. The mutations all appear to be located in the region of DNA topoisomerase II that shows homology to the "A" subunit of bacterial DNA gyrase. The heat-sensitive mutations and one cold-sensitive mutation lie in the center of the gene near the sequence that encodes the active site tyrosine. The three other cold-sensitive mutations map farther toward the 3' end of the gene. The cold-sensitive mutations exhibit intragenic complementation, and the complementation groups correspond to the physical map. We sequenced nine top2 mutations and found that the mutations are usually single missense mutations, frequently involve proline, and affect conserved regions of the protein. Suppressor analysis yielded two intragenic suppressors and seven independent isolates of an allele-specific extragenic suppressor we named tos1; tos1 is not allelic to any genes predicted to encode type I topoisomerase-related proteins. The two intragenic suppressors were tested for allele-specificity; the results revealed a complex pattern of suppression between heat-sensitive and cold-sensitive top2 alleles. These top2 mutations may have compensatory effects on the general stability of the protein.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract A gene encoding a type I topoisomerase (TOP1) was isolated from Candida albicans , sequenced, and expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae . The TOP1 gene was identified from a C. albicans genomic library by hybridization with the product of a polymerase chain reaction with degenerate primer sets encoding regions conserved in other TOP1 genes. A clone containing an open reading frame of 2463 bp and predicted to encode a protein of 778 amino acids with sequence similarity to eukaryotic type I topoisomerases was identified. The C. albicans TOP1 gene restored camptothecin sensitivity and increased the topoisomerase activity in S. cerevisiae , indicating that the DNA fragment encodes a functional C. albicans topoisomerase I.  相似文献   

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