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1.
We described a strategy which facilitates the identification of cell mutants which are restricted in DNA synthesis in a temperature-dependent manner. A collection of over 200 cell mutants temperature-sensitive for growth was isolated in established Chinese hamster cell lines (CHO and V79) by a variety of selective and nonselective techniques. Approximately 10% of these mutants were identified as ts DNA- based on differential inhibition of macromolecular synthesis at the restrictive temperature (39 degrees C) as assessed by incorporation of [3H]thymidine and [35S]methionine. Nine such mutants, selected for further study, demonstrated rapid shutoff of DNA replication at 39 degrees C. Infections with two classes of DNA viruses extensively dependent on host-cell functions for their replication were used to distinguish defects in DNA synthesis itself from those predominantly affecting other aspects of DNA replication. All cell mutants supported human adenovirus type 2 (Ad2) and mouse polyomavirus DNA synthesis at the permissive temperature. Five of the nine mutants (JB3-B, JB3-O, JB7-K, JB8-D, and JB11-J) restricted polyomavirus DNA replication upon transfection with viral sequences at 33 degrees C and subsequent shift to 39 degrees C either before or after the onset of viral DNA synthesis. Only one of these mutants (JB3-B) also restricted Ad2 DNA synthesis after virion infection under comparable conditions. No mutant was both restrictive for Ad2 and permissive for polyomavirus DNA synthesis at 39 degrees C. The differential effect of these cell mutants on viral DNA synthesis is expected to assist subsequent definition of the biochemical defect responsible.  相似文献   

2.
We mutagenized RH delta hxgprt strain tachyzoites of Toxoplasma gondii using N-nitroso-N-ethylurea and analyzed 40 clonal isolates (of 3680 ENU mutants) that were unable to grow in cell culture at 40 degrees C. These isolates grew normally at 34 degrees C, but showed variable growth at temperatures between 34 and 39 degrees C. The inability to grow at 40 degrees C was also correlated with a loss of virulence in mice for those mutants examined. We further characterized the temperature-sensitive (ts) isolates using flow cytometry and propidium iodide staining and identified three types of cell cycle-related mutations. Regardless of temperature, in the isolates ts1C12, ts7B4, and ts7B10, the distribution of parasites with a haploid DNA content was substantially higher (congruent with 85%) than that observed for RH delta hxgprt (congruent with 60%). Four other isolates, ts4F6, ts6C11, ts8G10, and ts11F5, contained G1-related mutations, and in each case, the DNA distribution among parasites at the permissive temperature was similar to that of the parental strain, but at 40 degrees C only a single population containing a 1N nuclear DNA complement was evident. Furthermore, there was no evidence of nuclear division or cytokinesis at 40 degrees C, and these parasites demonstrated a distended cytoplasm typical of G1 arrest in other cell types. Finally, parasites of the ts11C9 mutant arrested in two near-equal populations with either 1N or 2N complements of nuclear DNA. All arrested ts11C9 parasites contained a single nucleus, and a major subfraction of the 2N population contained abnormal and incompletely formed daughters-indicating that the initiation of daughter formation can occur in the absence of nuclear division.  相似文献   

3.
Four temperature-sensitive mutants of rat 3Y1 fibroblasts belonging to separate complementation groups (3Y1tsD123, 3Y1tsF121, 3Y1tsG125, and 3Y1tsH203) are arrested mainly with a 2C DNA content, when cells proliferating at 33.8 degrees C are shifted up to 39.8 degrees C (Ohno et al., 1984). Zaitsu and Kimura (submitted for publication) showed that 3Y1tsF121 cells synchronized in the early S phase were arrested with a 4C DNA content at 39.8 degrees C. We studied the traverse through the S and G2 phases at 39.8 degrees C in the four ts mutants synchronized at the early S phase and found that 3Y1tsG125 and 3Y1tsH203 cells were arrested with a 4C DNA content as 3Y1tsF121, while 3Y1tsD123 cells went through S and G2 phases and underwent mitosis. When 3Y1tsF121 and 3Y1tsG125 mutants arrested at 39.8 degrees C were shifted down to 33.8 degrees C, a substantial fraction of the cells with a 4C DNA content started, with a certain lag period, DNA synthesis without intervening mitosis and underwent the first mitosis with a lag period similar to that in the cells arrested with a 2C DNA content. The tetraploid cells thus generated had a proliferating ability lower than that of diploid cells.  相似文献   

4.
Two temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of mammalian cell lines (AF8 and cs4D3) that arrest in G1 at the nonpermissive temperature were fused with chick erythrocytes and the induction of DNA synthesis was studied in the resulting heterokaryons. While both AF8 and cs4D3 could induce DNA synthesis in chick nuclei at the permissive temperature, they both failed to do so when arrested in G1 at the nonpermissive temperature. When S phase AF8 cells were fused with chick erythrocytes, chick nuclei were reactivated even if the heterokaryons were incubated at the temperature nonpermissive for AF8. A third ts mutant, ts111, that is blocked in cytokinesis but continues to synthesize DNA, reactivated chick nuclei at both permissive and nonpermissive temperature. It is concluded that chick erythrocyte reactivation depends on the presence of S phase-specific factors.  相似文献   

5.
E36 ts24 is a temperature-sensitive cell cycle mutant which has been derived from the Chinese hamster lung cell line E36. This mutant is arrested in phase S when incubated at the restrictive temperature (40.3 degrees C) for growth. At this temperature, proliferation of the mutant cells ceases after 10 h. About 2 h earlier, DNA synthesis is arrested. These kinetic studies indicate that the execution point of the mutant cells is in early S phase well beyond the G1/S boundary. The pattern of replication bands in E36 ts24 cell grown for 9 h at 40.3 degrees C strengthen the kinetic studies and map the execution point to early S phase. The exact point of arrest of the mutant cells in phase S was mapped in early S phase near the execution point. At the point of arrest the cells continue to synthesize DNA at at a high rate but practically all of the newly synthesized DNA is degraded. This high rate of DNA degradation is limited to nascent DNA at the point of arrest. In the presence of 5-bromodeoxyuridine (5-BudR), the last E36 ts24 cells which reach mitosis at the restrictive temperature for growth show asymmetric replication bands which illustrate DNA degradation and resynthesis occurring in these cells at 40.3 degrees C.  相似文献   

6.
Mitochondrial DNA replication was examined in mutants for seven different Saccharomyces cerevisiae genes which are essential for nuclear DNA replication. In cdc8 and cdc21, mutants defective in continued replication during the S phase of the cell cycle, mitochondrial DNA replication ceases at the nonpermissive temperature. Replication is temperature sensitive even when these mutants are arrested in the G1 phase of the cell cycle with α factor, a condition where mitochondrial DNA replication continues for the equivalent of several generations at the permissive temperature. Therefore the cessation of replication results from a defect in mitochondrial replication per se, rather than from an indirect consequence of cells being blocked in a phase of the cell cycle where mitochondrial DNA is not normally synthesized. Since the temperature-sensitive mutations are recessive, the products of genes cdc8 and cdc21 must be required for both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA replication. In contrast to cdc8 and cdc21, mitochondrial DNA replication continues for a long time at the nonpermissive temperature in five other cell division cycle mutants in which nuclear DNA synthesis ceases within one cell cycle: cdc4, cdc7, and cdc28, which are defective in the initiation of nuclear DNA synthesis, and cdc14 and cdc23, which are defective in nuclear division. The products of these genes, therefore, are apparently not required for the initiation of mitochondrial DNA replication.  相似文献   

7.
Four temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of rat 3Y1 fibroblasts, representing independent complementation groups, cease to proliferate predominantly with a 2n DNA content, at the restrictive temperature (39.8 degrees C) (temperature arrest) or at the permissive temperature (33.8 degrees C) at a confluent cell density (density arrest) (Ohno et al., 1984). We studied the temperature- or the density-arrested cells of these mutants infected with simian virus 40 (SV40) or its mutants affecting large T or small t antigen with respect to kinetics at 39.8 degrees C of entry into S phase and cellular proliferation. Three mutants, 3Y1tsD123, 3Y1tsF121 and 3Y1tsG125, expressed T antigen and entered S phase at 39.8 degrees C from both the arrested states after infection with either wild-type, tsA mutants, or a .54/.59 deletion mutant of SV40, whereas in the density-arrested 3Y1tsH203, expression of T antigen and entry into S phase were inefficient and ts. Following the WT-SV40 induced entry into S phase, the temperature-arrested 3Y1tsD123 detached from the substratum with no detectable increase in cell number, whereas the density-arrested ones completed a round of the cell cycle and then detached. 3Y1tsF121 and 3Y1tsG125 in the both arrested states proliferated through more than one generation. 3Y1tsF121 and 3Y1tsG125 in the density-arrested state infected with tsA mutants once proliferated and then ceased to increase in number as the percentage of T-antigen positive population decreased. These results suggest that wild-type and tsA-mutated large T antigens are able to overcome the cellular ts blocks of entry into S phase in the 3 ts mutants of 3Y1 cells in both the arrested states, and that small t antigen is not required to overcome the blocks. It is also suggested that cellular behaviors subsequent to S phase (viability, mitosis, and proliferation in the following generations) depend on cellular arrest states, on traits of cellular ts defects, and on the duration of large T antigen expression.  相似文献   

8.
In eucaryotes a cell cycle control called a checkpoint ensures that mitosis occurs only after chromosomes are completely replicated and any damage is repaired. The function of this checkpoint in budding yeast requires the RAD9 gene. Here we examine the role of the RAD9 gene in the arrest of the 12 cell division cycle (cdc) mutants, temperature-sensitive lethal mutants that arrest in specific phases of the cell cycle at a restrictive temperature. We found that in four cdc mutants the cdc rad9 cells failed to arrest after a shift to the restrictive temperature, rather they continued cell division and died rapidly, whereas the cdc RAD cells arrested and remained viable. The cell cycle and genetic phenotypes of the 12 cdc RAD mutants indicate the function of the RAD9 checkpoint is phase-specific and signal-specific. First, the four cdc RAD mutants that required RAD9 each arrested in the late S/G(2) phase after a shift to the restrictive temperature when DNA replication was complete or nearly complete, and second, each leaves DNA lesions when the CDC gene product is limiting for cell division. Three of the four CDC genes are known to encode DNA replication enzymes. We found that the RAD17 gene is also essential for the function of the RAD9 checkpoint because it is required for phase-specific arrest of the same four cdc mutants. We also show that both X- or UV-irradiated cells require the RAD9 and RAD17 genes for delay in the G(2) phase. Together, these results indicate that the RAD9 checkpoint is apparently activated only by DNA lesions and arrests cell division only in the late S/G(2) phase.  相似文献   

9.
A semipermissive growth condition was defined for a Schizosaccharomyces pombe strain carrying a thermosensitive allele of DNA polymerase delta (pol delta ts03). Under this condition, DNA polymerase delta is semidisabled and causes a delay in S-phase progression. Using a genetic strategy, we have isolated a panel of mutants that enter premature mitosis when DNA replication is incomplete but which are not defective for arrest in G2/M following DNA damage. We characterized the aya14 mutant, which enters premature mitosis when S phase is arrested by genetic or chemical means. However, this mutant is sensitive to neither UV nor gamma irradiation. Two genomic clones, rad26+ and cds1+, were found to suppress the hydroxyurea sensitivity of the aya14 mutant. Genetic analysis indicates that aya14 is a novel allele of the cell cycle checkpoint gene rad26+, which we have named rad26.a14. cds1+ is a suppressor which suppresses the S-phase feedback control defect of rad26.a14 when S phase is inhibited by either hydroxyurea or cdc22, but it does not suppress the defect when S phase is arrested by a mutant DNA polymerase. Analyses of rad26.a14 in a variety of cdc mutant backgrounds indicate that strains containing rad26.a14 bypass S-phase arrest but not G1 or late S/G2 arrest. A model of how Rad26 monitors S-phase progression to maintain the dependency of cell cycle events and coordinates with other rad/hus checkpoint gene products in responding to radiation damage is proposed.  相似文献   

10.
Isolation of a wide variety of temperature-sensitive (ts) cell cycle mutants in mammalian cells has previously proved to be a very difficult task. The various procedures used for the isolation of such mutants included a mutant enrichment step based on exposure of the cells to the restrictive temperatures in order to kill the growing wild-type cells with agents that kill DNA-synthesizing cells. Hence, these methods favored the isolation of ts mutants that do not lose viability rapidly at the restrictive temperatures, We have treated cells of the Chinese hamster established cell line E36 with the mutagen ethyl-methane-sulfonate (EMS) and used a replicaplating technique that we developed to screen the ts mutants for growth. This technique enabled us to recover all ts mutants for growth including the ts cell cycle mutants. Screening of the ts cell cycle mutants among the ts mutants for growth was performed by the flow microfluorimetry technique and the premature chromosome condensation technique. Our results show that 1.3% of the survivors of the mutagenic treatment are ts mutants for growth. Six of 84 ts mutants analyzed were found to be ts cell cycle mutants. They include ts mutants arrested in phases G1, S, and G2. Many of the ts mutants for growth including the ts cell cycle mutants arrested in S and G2 lose viability very fast when incubated at the restrictive temperature. As a consequence they could not have been isolated by any method that includes a mutant enrichment step based on the exposure of the cells to the restrictive temperature.  相似文献   

11.
A temperature-sensitive mutant of BHK, designated is BN-2, shows a rapid drop in 3H-thymidine incorporation along with accumulation of the cells in the G1 phase of the cycle when asynchronous cultures are shifted from 33.5°C to the nonpermissive temperature of 39.5°C. Synchronized cultures of ts BN-2 cells did not enter DNA synthesis when shifted up in G1. Shift-up of cultures at the beginning of the S phase resulted in an approximately normal rate of DNA synthesis for about 2 hr. The rate of DNA synthesis then quickly declined, and the cells became arrested in mid-S after completion of approximately 0.5 rounds of DNA replication. At the same time, the majority of the cells were observed to lose the nuclear membrane and displayed premature chromosome condensation. These events were followed by the appearance of cells containing several micronuclei and eventual cell disruption and death. The nonpermissive temperature appeared to have no effect on either the elongation of short fragments of DNA or the execution of mitosis after the completion of the S phase under permissive conditions. The ts defect in this mutant may directly limit the initiation of DNA synthesis or alter the regulation of chromatin condensation.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Ts-131b, one of the temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants isolated from mouse FM3A cells, was found to be defective in DNA replication at a non-permissive temperature. After the cells were transferred to 39.5 °C, the cell number increased by only 10% and the rate of incorporation of precursors into cellular DNA decreased rapidly. Cell cycle analysis by a flow cytometric method with the cells incubated at 39.5 °C revealed that progression of the cells through the S phase was inhibited and most of the cells were arrested in the S phase. To study the defect in DNA replication of this ts-mutant at 39.5 °C, DNA-fiber autoradiography was performed to measure the rate of DNA-chain elongation. The results showed that the rate of DNA-chain elongation was decreased at 6 h after the temperature shift. However, since the decrease in the rate of DNA-chain elongation was not sufficient to account for the decrease in the rate of incorporation of the precursors, it was suggested that there was also a decrease in the rate of initiation of DNA replication at some of the replicon origins.  相似文献   

14.
Four temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of rat 3Y1 cells (3Y1tsD123, 3Y1tsF121, 3Y1tsG125, and 3Y1tsH203) are arrested at 39.8°C mainly with a 2N DNA content (temperature-arrested cells). The states of these cells were compared with findings in case of cells arrested at 33.8°C at saturation density (density-arrested cells), with regard to the ability to enter S phase after release from arrest or after serum stimulation at 39.8°C. With the 3Y1tsD123, the ts defect is an event which seems essential for the initiation of S phase and occurs after mitosis but not after release from the density arrest. The defect in 3Y1tsF121 related to the efficiency of utilization of serum component(s). In case of 3Y1tsG125, the state of temperature arrest appeared to locate between the state of density arrest and the beginning of S phase. There was no significant difference between the density- and the temperature-arrested cells, in case of 3Y1tsH203.  相似文献   

15.
S Handeli  H Weintraub 《Cell》1992,71(4):599-611
The ts41 mutation of Chinese hamster cells was first isolated and characterized by Hirschberg and Marcus (1982) who showed that at nonpermissive temperature, cells accumulate up to 16C equivalents of DNA. Here we show that the mutation is recessive and at nonpermissive temperature, cells replicate their genome normally, but instead of going on into G2, M, and G1, they pass directly into a second S phase. Entry into a second S phase does not require serum nor is it inhibited by G2 checkpoints or mitotic inhibitors. Temperature-shift experiments suggest that the ts41 gene product participates in two functions in the cell cycle: entry into mitosis and inhibition of entry into S phase. The ts41 mutation seems to define a class of cell cycle mutant that couples the sequential events of DNA replication and mitosis.  相似文献   

16.
Summary We have isolated a number of temperature conditional cell division cycle mutants of the unicellular plantChlamydomonas reinhardtii that are defective in single nuclear genes. Cells grow and divide normally at the permissive temperature (21 °C), but arrest in division at the restrictive temperature (33 °C). We have characterized these mutants using DNA probes and immunofluorescence techniques to localize cytoskeletal and microtubule organizing centre proteins. We describe here 3 broad classes of cell cycle mutation which result in cell cycle arrest with: unreplicated DNA (G1 arrest), duplicated DNA (G2 arrest) and multiple nuclei due to defective cytokinesis (cytokinesis arrest). The continuation of nuclear division in mutants blocked in cytokinesis provides support of an earlier hypothesis that stage specific events in theChlamydomonas cell cycle are arranged in separate dependent sequences. The mutants isolated in the present study provide insights into the role of cytoskeletal proteins in the coordination of plant cell division and the means to investigate the molecular mechanisms whereby division by multiple fission is controlled in the unicellular plantChlamydomonas.Abbreviations BB basal bodies - EMS ethylmethane sulphonate - MT microtubule - MTOC Microtubule organizing centre - NBBC nucleus-basal body connector - PAR photosynthetically active radiation  相似文献   

17.
Three different temperature sensitive mutants derived from the Syrian hamster cell line BHK 21 were found to have greatly reduced DNA synthesis at the non-permissive temperature. These mutants are distinct by complementation analysis and behave at the non-permissive temperature as cell cycle traverse defective mutants. Microfluorometric analysis of mutant populations arrested at the non-permissive temperature shows an accumulation of cells with G1 DNA content. Mutants ts 13 and ts HJ4 synchronized in G1 by serum or isoleucine deprivation and shifted to the non-permissive temperature at the time of release do not enter the S phase, while in the case of mutant ts 11 preincubation at the non-permissive temperature before release is required to completely prevent its entry into S. Ts 13 and ts 11 are able to traverse the S phase at the non-permissive temperature when synchronized at the boundary G1/S; in this case, preincubation of ts 11 at the non-permissive temperature before release does not affect the ability of these cells to perform DNA synthesis. On the other hand, ts HJ4 appears to traverse S only partially when tested under similar conditions. Temperature shift experiments of mutant populations at different times after isoleucine synchronization suggest that ts 13 and ts 11 are blocked at the non-permissive temperature in early G1, whereas ts HJ4 is probably affected near the initiation of DNA synthesis, or in some early S function.  相似文献   

18.
The G1 blocks in three temperature-sensitive (ts) Syrian hamster cell-cycle mutants have been mapped in relation to other G1 landmarks. Two mutants reported here, ts-559 and ts-694, show defective progression only in G1. When shifted from the permissive temperature of 33 degrees C to the non-permissive temperature of 39 degrees C, G1 cells of these two mutants show no further cell cycle progression, while cells in S, G2 and mitosis progress through the cell cycle but become blocked after entering G1. The two mutants complement each other, and also complement the previously reported mutant ts-550C with blocks in both G1 and G2 of the cell cycle. The locations of the G1 blocks in both ts-559 and ts-694 are before the hydroxyurea arrest point. The G1 ts point in ts-694 is prior to the isoleucine deprivation and serum starvation points, while the G1 block in ts-559 is after the serum starvation point but before the isoleucine block. Other G1 block points which have been reported are in mutants of different species and isolated in different laboratories, causing difficulties for relative positioning of the blocks in G1. The mutants for mapping in this study have been isolated from the same cell line. The G1 ts arrest points of ts-559 and ts-694, and that found in ts-550C, together with nutritional deprivations and metabolic inhibitors, provide seven reference points which divide G1 into six segments, each of which is bracketed by two adjacent points: mitosis, ts-694 block, serum starvation arrest point, ts-559 block, isoleucine deprivation arrest point, ts-550C block, hydroxyurea or excess-thymidine arrest segment.  相似文献   

19.
In eucaryotic cells chromosomes must be fully replicated and repaired before mitosis begins. Genetic studies indicate that this dependence of mitosis on completion of DNA replication and DNA repair derives from a negative control called a checkpoint which somehow checks for replication and DNA damage and blocks cell entry into mitosis. Here we summarize our current understanding of the genetic components of the cell cycle checkpoint in budding yeast. Mutants were identified and their phase and signal specificity tested primarily through interactions of the arrest-defective mutants with cell division cycle mutants. The results indicate that dual checkpoint controls exist in budding yeast, one control sensitive to inhibition of DNA replication (S-phase checkpoint), and a distinct but overlapping control sensitive to DNA repair (G2 checkpoint). Six genes are required for arrest in G2 phase after DNA damage (RAD9, RAD17, RAD24, MEC1, MEC2, and MEC3), and two of these are also essential for arrest in S phase when DNA replication is blocked (MEC1 and MEC2).  相似文献   

20.
Two heat-sensitive (arrested in G1 at 39.5 degrees C) and two cold-sensitive (arrested in G1 at 33 degrees C) clonal cell-cycle mutants of the murine P-815-X2 mastocytoma line were tested for DNA polymerase alpha, beta and gamma activities. After transfer of mutant cells to the respective nonpermissive temperature, DNA polymerase alpha activities decreased more slowly than relative numbers of cells in S phase. Furthermore, numbers of DNA-synthesizing cells decreased to near-zero levels, whereas polymerase alpha activities in arrested cells were as high as 15-40% of control values. After return of arrested cells to the permissive temperature, polymerase alpha activities increased essentially in parallel with relative numbers of cells in S phase. In contrast to the changes in thymidine kinase (Schneider, E., Müller, B. and Schindler, R. (1983) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 741, 77-85), the decrease of polymerase alpha during entry of cells into proliferative quiescence thus appears to be under rather relaxed control, while after return of arrested cells to the permissive temperature the increase in polymerase alpha is tightly coupled with reentry of cells into S phase. For DNA polymerase beta and gamma activities, no obvious correlation with changes in the proliferative state of cells was detected.  相似文献   

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