首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 22 毫秒
1.
Treatment of the TsAF8 temperature-sensitive (TS) mutant of Syrian hamster BHK-21 cells, with calcium phosphate precipitates of genomic TS+ DNAs from a variety of mammalian cell lines permitted the selection of TS+ colonies at 40 degrees C. TS+ transformation events were distinguished from spontaneous TS+ reversions in experiments in which alpha-amanitin-sensitive (Amas) TS+ DNA was used to transform an AmaR derivative of TsAF8 cells and AmaR TS+ DNA was used to transform Amas TsAF8 cells. In each case it was possible to demonstrate the unselected acquisition of the appropriate Amas or AmaR phenotype with the selected TS+ allele. Each of these TS+ transformed cell lines when grown at 40 degrees C contained an RNA polymerase II activity with a sensitivity to inhibition by alpha-amanitin characteristic of the particular DNA used to transform the TS cells, whereas at 34 degrees C the same cells contained a mixture of AmaR and Amas polymerase II activities. Together, these data provide convincing evidence that the RNA polymerase II gene determining sensitivity to inhibition by alpha-amanitin can be transferred to TsAF8 cells and that the TS defect in TsAF8 is a polymerase II mutation.  相似文献   

2.
The hypothesis of functional hemizygosity has been examined for the α-amanitin resistant (AmaR, a codominant marker) locus in a series of Chinese hamster cell lines. AmaR mutants were obtained from different cell lines, e.g., CHO, CHW, M3-1 and CHO-Kl, at similar frequencies. After fractionation of different RNA polymerase activities in the extracts by chromatographic procedures, the sensitivity of the mutant RNA polymerase II towards α-amanitin was determined. While all of the RNA polymerase II activity in mutant CHO and CHO-Kl lines became resistant to α-amanitin inhibition, only about 50% of the activity is highly resistant in AmaR mutants of CHW and M3-1 cell lines. The remaining activity in the latter cell lines shows α-amanitin sensitivity similar to that seen with the wild-type enzyme. This behaviour is similar to that observed with a 1:1 mixture of resistant and sensitive enzymes from CHO cells. These results, therefore, strongly indicate that while only one functional copy of the gene affected by α-amanitin is present in CHO and CHO-Kl cells, two copies of this gene are functional in the CHW and M3-1 cell lines.  相似文献   

3.
A mammalian temperature-sensitive mutant tsAF8 shows cell cycle arrest at nonpermissive temperatures in mid-G1 phase. DNA sequence comparison of the largest subunit of RNA polymerase II (Rpb1) from the wild-type and the mutant shows that the mutant phenotype results from a (hemizygous) C-to-A variation at nucleotide 944 in one rpb1 allele, giving rise to an Ala-to-Asp substitution at residue 315 in the protein. This amino acid substitution was introduced into the Schizosaccharomyces pombe rpb1 gene. Whereas tsAF8 cells showed growth defects and altered Rpb1 distribution at nonpermissive temperatures, yeast cells harboring this amino acid substitution did not show apparent temperature sensitivity. The effect of another temperature-sensitive Rpb1 mutation was also small. These results suggest that mutation of the rpb1 gene, which is critical in mammalian cells, may not be deleterious in yeast cells.  相似文献   

4.
tsAF8 cells are a temperature-sensitive mutant of BHK cells that arrest at the nonpermissive temperature in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. The activity of solubilized RNA polymerase II and its ability to bind [3H]-γ-amanitin decrease in tsAF8 cells at 40.6°, with a half-life of ~ 10 hr. No appreciable changes occur in these two parameters in tsAF8 cells at 34° or in BHK cells at either 34° or 40.6°. Protein synthesis is not appreciably affected for at least 24 hr after tsAF8 cells are shifted to 40.6°. These results indicate that in tsAF8 cells at the nonpermissive temperature, there is a defect in either the synthesis, the assembly, or the stability of RNA polymerase II, and that the loss of RNA polymerase II molecules is not due to widespread cellular damage.  相似文献   

5.
A mutation in the RNA polymerase II largest subunit (RpII LS) that is related to abnormal induction of sister chromatid exchange has previously been described the CHO-K1 cell mutant tsTM4. To elucidate the molecular basis of this effect we introduced the mutation into the homologous site in the Schizosaccharomyces pombe rpb1 gene, which encodes RpII LS. Since the tsTM4 mutant exhibited a decrease in the rate of DNA synthesis in cells arrested in S phase at the nonpermissive temperature, we focussed on the study of growth, the cell cycle, and chromosome stability at various temperatures. First, we examined the effects of the mutation on haploid yeast cells. The mutant showed slower growth than the wild type, but cell growth was not arrested at the nonpermissive temperature. When growing cells were shifted to the nonpermissive temperature, an accumulation of cells in G1 and/or G0 was observed. Tetrad analysis suggested that these phenotypes were associated with the mutation. In diploid cells, chromosome instability was detected by loss of intragenic complementation between two alleles of the ade6 gene. An abnormal fraction of cells containing an intermediate DNA content was also observed by FACS analysis. The accumulation of this fraction may reflect the fact that a large number of cells are in S phase or have an abnormal DNA content as a result of chromosome instability. These observations demonstrate that the S. pomberpb1 mutant exhibits a phenotype very similar to that of the CHO-K1 cell mutant tsTM4. Received: 1 October 1997 / Accepted: 29 December 1997  相似文献   

6.
A mutation in the RNA polymerase II largest subunit (RpII LS) that is related to abnormal induction of sister chromatid exchange has previously been described the CHO-K1 cell mutant tsTM4. To elucidate the molecular basis of this effect we introduced the mutation into the homologous site in the Schizosaccharomyces pombe rpb1 gene, which encodes RpII LS. Since the tsTM4 mutant exhibited a decrease in the rate of DNA synthesis in cells arrested in S phase at the nonpermissive temperature, we focussed on the study of growth, the cell cycle, and chromosome stability at various temperatures. First, we examined the effects of the mutation on haploid yeast cells. The mutant showed slower growth than the wild type, but cell growth was not arrested at the nonpermissive temperature. When growing cells were shifted to the nonpermissive temperature, an accumulation of cells in G1 and/or G0 was observed. Tetrad analysis suggested that these phenotypes were associated with the mutation. In diploid cells, chromosome instability was detected by loss of intragenic complementation between two alleles of the ade6 gene. An abnormal fraction of cells containing an intermediate DNA content was also observed by FACS analysis. The accumulation of this fraction may reflect the fact that a large number of cells are in S phase or have an abnormal DNA content as a result of chromosome instability. These observations demonstrate that the S. pomberpb1 mutant exhibits a phenotype very similar to that of the CHO-K1 cell mutant tsTM4.  相似文献   

7.
A mammalian temperature-sensitive mutant tsAF8 shows cell cycle arrest at nonpermissive temperatures in mid-G1 phase. DNA sequence comparison of the largest subunit of RNA polymerase II (Rpb1) from the wild-type and the mutant shows that the mutant phenotype results from a (hemizygous) C-to-A variation at nucleotide 944 in one rpb1 allele, giving rise to an Ala-to-Asp substitution at residue 315 in the protein. This amino acid substitution was introduced into the Schizosaccharomyces pombe rpb1 gene. Whereas tsAF8 cells showed growth defects and altered Rpb1 distribution at nonpermissive temperatures, yeast cells harboring this amino acid substitution did not show apparent temperature sensitivity. The effect of another temperature-sensitive Rpb1 mutation was also small. These results suggest that mutation of the rpb1 gene, which is critical in mammalian cells, may not be deleterious in yeast cells. RID= ID= <E5>Correspondence to: </E5>K. Sugaya; <E5>email:</E5> k_sugaya&commat;nirs.go.jp Received: 2 September 2002 / Accepted: 7 October 2002  相似文献   

8.
9.
Mutations in the three largest subunits of yeast RNA polymerase II (RPB1, RPB2, and RPB3) were investigated for their effects on RNA polymerase II structure and assembly. Among 23 temperature-sensitive mutations, 6 mutations affected enzyme assembly, as assayed by immunoprecipitation of epitope-tagged subunits. In all six assembly mutants, RNA polymerase II subunits synthesized at the permissive temperature were incorporated into stably assembled, immunoprecipitable enzyme and remained stably associated when cells were shifted to the nonpermissive temperature, whereas subunits synthesized at the nonpermissive temperature were not incorporated into a completely assembled enzyme. The observation that subunit subcomplexes accumulated in assembly-mutant cells at the nonpermissive temperature led us to investigate whether these subcomplexes were assembly intermediates or merely byproducts of mutant enzyme instability. The time course of assembly of RPB1, RPB2, and RPB3 was investigated in wild-type cells and subsequently in mutant cells. Glycerol gradient fractionation of extracts of cells pulse-labeled for various times revealed that a subcomplex of RPB2 and RPB3 appears soon after subunit synthesis and can be chased into fully assembled enzyme. The RPB2-plus-RPB3 subcomplexes accumulated in all RPB1 assembly mutants at the nonpermissive temperature but not in an RPB2 or RPB3 assembly mutant. These data indicate that RPB2 and RPB3 form a complex that subsequently interacts with RPB1 during the assembly of RNA polymerase II.  相似文献   

10.
A single site mutant of Bacillus subtilis with a streptovaricin-resistant RNA polymerase has been isolated; this mutation caused temperature-sensitive sporulation, but had no effect on vegetative growth. The mutant (ts710) temperature-sensitive period irreversibly affected the middle and late stages of sporulation. Mutant cells grown at the nonpermissive temperature exhibited abnormal serine protease accumulation, serine esterase accumulation, alkaline phosphatase accumulation, RNA polymerase template specificity changes, and pulse-labeled RNA synthesis profiles. The accumulation of metal protease was not affected at the nonpermissive temperature. Attempts to isolate single site mutants which were streptolydigin-resistant, and temperature-sensitive for sporulation, were unsuccessful.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Purified RNA polymerase II (RNA nucleotidyl-transferase; EC 2.7.7.6) extracted from flies possessing lesions in the Ultrabithorax-like (Ubl) locus of Drosophila melanogaster has altered activity in vitro (Greenleaf et al. 1979, 1980; Coulter and Greenleaf 1982). This strongly suggests that the Ubl locus encodes a subunit of RNA polymerase II. Ethyl methanesulfonate was used to induce a temperature-sensitive mutation in this locus. Flies either homozygous or hemizygous for this new X–linked mutation (Ubl ts) display viability comparable to that of wild-type flies at 22° C but are lethal at 29° C. The temperature-sensitive period for Ubl ts flies is between gastrulation (6 h, 29° C) and pupation (9–10 days, 22° C). Zygotes shifted from 22° C to 29° C die at either the late embryonic or first larval instar stage while temperature shifts of second and third instar larvae result in the lethal phase occurring at the pupal stage. Most pupae shifted from 22° C to 29° C undergo metamorphosis and eclose as adults. Adults are viable if placed at 29° C; however, all females and some males become sterile if maintained at this temperature.Somatic recombination was used to induce clones homozygous for a null allele of Ubl at different stages of development. Clones of this null allele appear to be cell lethal indicating that the Ubl + gene product is required at all stages of development. The viability of Ubl ts pupae and adults at 29° C may result from only a partial reduction in activity caused by the mutation at this nonpermissive temperature.  相似文献   

12.
Suppressors of a temperature-sensitive RNA polymerase II mutation were isolated to identify proteins that interact with RNA polymerase II in yeast cells. Ten independently isolated extragenic mutations that suppressed the temperature-sensitive mutation rpb1-1 and produced a cold-sensitive phenotype were all found to be alleles of a single gene, SRB1. An SRB1 partial deletion mutant was further investigated and found to exhibit several pleiotropic phenotypes. These included suppression of numerous temperature-sensitive RNA polymerase II mutations, alteration of the temperature growth range of cells containing wild-type RNA polymerase, and sterility of cells of alpha mating type. The ability of SRB1 mutations to suppress the temperature-sensitive phenotype of RNA polymerase II mutants did not extend to other temperature-sensitive mutants investigated. Isolation of the SRB1 gene revealed that SRB1 is KEX2. These results indicate that the KEX2 protease, whose only known substrates are hormone precursors, can have an important influence on RNA polymerase II and the temperature-dependent growth properties of yeast cells.  相似文献   

13.
14.
We have investigated the capacity of a murine cell line with a temperature-sensitive (ts) mutation in the DNA polymerase α (Pola) locus and a series of ts non-Pola mutant cell lines from separate complementation groups to stimulate DNA synthesis, in senescent fibroblast nuclei in heterokaryons. In the Pola mutant × senescent heterodikaryons, both human and murine nuclei display significantly diminished levels of DNA synthesis at the restrictive temperature (39.5°C) as determined by [3H]thymidine labeling in autoradiographs. In contrast, all of the non-Pola mutants, as well as the parental (wild-type) murine cells, induced similar levels of DNA synthesis in both parental nuclei at the nonpermissive and permissive temperatures. Similarly, young human fibroblasts are also able to initiate DNA synthesis in heterokaryons with the ts Pola mutant at the two temperatures. In order to determine if complementation of the non-Pola mutants requires induction of serum responsive factors in the senescent cells, fusion studies of similar design were conducted with young and old human fibroblasts incubated in low serum (0.2%) for 48 hr prior to and after cell fusion. Again, a diminished level of DNA synthesis was observed at 39.5°C in the Pola mutant x senescent cell heterokaryons. In these low-serum studies, both parental nuclei in the Pola x young cell heterokaryons and the human nuclei in heterokaryons with one of the non-Pola mutants (FT107) also displayed diminished levels of DNA synthetic activity. All of the other mutants are able to support similar levels of synthetic activity at both temperatures in the presence of reduced serum. The nature of the mutation in three of the non-Pola lines has not been determined but, like the Pola mutant cells, are inhibited in the G1 phase of the cell cycle when incubated at the nonpermissive temperature (39.5°C). The fourth non-Pola mutant line is known to have at least one ts mutation in the cdc2 gene and is inhibited in the G2 phase when exposed to 39.5°C. These results suggest that there may be a functional deficiency of pol α in senescent human fibroblasts, and this replication factor may be one of the rate-limiting factors involved in loss of the capacity to initiate DNA synthesis in senescent cells. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
Alpha-amanitin-resistant D. melanogaster with an altered RNA polymerase II.   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Following EMS mutagenesis we recovered a mutant of D. melanogaster that grows at concentrations of alpha-amanitin lethal to wild-type. To our knowledge this mutant represents the first example of an amanitin-resistant eucaryotic organism. The amanitin resistance of the mutant (AmaC4) is due to an alteration in its DNA-dependent RNA polymerase II, which is approximately 250 times less sensitive to inhibition by amanitin than the wild-type polymerase II whether tested in nuclei, in partially-fractionated extracts or as a highly purified enzyme. While the wild-type enzyme activity is inhibited 50% by 2.1 x 10(-8) M alpha-amanitin, inhibition of 50% of the AmaC4 RNA polymerase II activity requires a toxin concentration of 5.6 x 10(-6) M. The mutation responsible for the amanitin resistance of AmaC4 is on the X chromosome near the vermillion locus.  相似文献   

16.
17.
A number of mutant Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell lines resistant to the cytotoxic action of alpha-amanitin have been isolated. The alpha-amanitin sensitivity of the different mutant cell lines varied widely, but correlated well with the alpha-amanitin sensitivity of the RNA polymerase II activity in each of these mutant cell lines. In comparison with the RNA polymerase II of wild-type cells, three mutants, Ama39, Ama6, and Amal, required respectively 2- to 3-fold, 8- to 10-fold, and about 800-fold higher concentrations of alpha-amanitin for inhibition of their polymerase II activity. Determination of the equilibrium dissociation constants (KD) for complexes between 0-[3H]methyl-demethyl-gamma-amanitin and RNA polymearse II indicated that differences in alpha-amanitin sensitivity were reflected in differences in the ability of the enzymes to bind amanitin. Hybrids formed by fusion of mutants with cells of wild-type sensitivity contained both mutant and wild-type polymerase II activities. Thus, each of the different alpha-amanitin resistance mutations was expressed co-dominantly. A test for complementation between two of these mutations by measurement of both the alpha-amanitin sensitivity and the [3H]amanitin binding by RNA polymerase II in Ama6 X Amal hybrid cells did not reveal any wild-type RNA polymerase II activity. These data provide evidence that the mutation to alpha-amanitin resistance involves structural changes in the gene coding for the alpha-amanitin binding subunit of RNA polymerase II. These changes appear to account for the alpha-amanitin-resistant phenotypes of these mutant cells.  相似文献   

18.
Summary All of several hundred erythromycin resistant (eryR) single site mutants ofBacillus subtilis W168 are temperature sensitive for sporulation (spots). The mutants and wild type cells grow vegetatively at essentially the same rates at both permissive (30° C) and nonpermissive (47° C) temperatures. In addition, cellular protein synthesis, cell mass increases and cell viabilities are similar in mutant and wild type strains for several hours after the end of vegetative growth (47° C). In the mutants examined, the temperature sensitive periods begin when the sporulation process is approximately 40% completed, and end when the process is 90% complete. At nonpermissive temperatures, the mutants produce serine and metal proteases at 50% of the wild type rate, accumulate serine esterase at 16% of the wild type rate, and do not demonstrate a sporulation related increase in alkaline phosphatase activity.The eryR and spots phenotypes cotransform 100%, and cotransduce 100% using phage PBS1. Revertants selected for ability to sporulate normally at 47° C (spo+), simultaneously regain parental sensitivity to erythromycin. No second site revertants are found.Ribosomes from eryR spots strains bind erythromycin at less than 1% of the wild type rate. A single 50S protein (L17) from mutant ribosomes shows an altered electrophoretic mobility. Ribosomes from spo+ revertants bind erythromycin like parental ribosomes and their proteins are electrophoretically identical to wild type. These data indicate that the L17 protein of the 50S ribosomal subunit fromBacillus subtilis may participate specifically in the sporulation process.  相似文献   

19.
We have isolated a yeast conditional mutant which rapidly ceases synthesis of mRNA when subjected to the nonpermissive temperature. This mutant (rpb1-1) was constructed by replacing the wild-type chromosomal copy of the gene encoding the largest subunit of RNA polymerase II with one mutagenized in vitro. The rapid cessation of mRNA synthesis in vivo and the lack of RNA polymerase II activity in crude extracts indicate that the mutant possesses a functionally defective, rather than an assembly-defective, RNA polymerase II. The shutdown in mRNA synthesis in the rpb1-1 mutant has pleiotropic effects on the synthesis of other RNAs and on the heat shock response. This mutant provides direct evidence that the RPB1 protein has a functional role in mRNA synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
Morphological studies of a conditionally temperature-sensitive ribonucleic acid polymerase mutant of Bacillus subtilis have revealed that sporulation is inhibited at stage II when the cells are grown at 47.5 C. Growth and sporulation occur normally at 30 C with the mutant. The mutant grows normally at 47.5 C but is prevented from sporulating at the nonpermissive temperature by an abnormal septation during forespore membrane formation which prevents the subsequent engulfment process (stage III). The mutation affects the normal functioning of ribonucleic acid polymerase at the nonpermissive temperature resulting in abortive sporulation.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号