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1.
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 degrees C. By linkage analysis, two complementation groups were identified which were not allelic to known G1 arrest mutations. One of the mutants isolated, sna41goul, arrested with a G1 DNA content and expressed a pleiomorphic phenotype, i.e., a mixture of cut and cdc phenotypes, at 36 degrees C. 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 sna41goal mutant can be suppressed to some extent by ts mutations in polalpha. Our genetic results are consistent with a model in which Cdc45 plays crucial roles in the assembly of the replication apparatus at replication origins.  相似文献   

2.
A large number of mutants that are temperature sensitive (ts) for growth have been isolated from mouse mammary carcinoma FM3A cells by an improved selection method consisting of cell synchronization and short exposures to restrictive temperature. The improved method increased the efficiency of isolating DNA ts mutants, which showed a rapid decrease in DNA-synthesizing ability after temperature shift-up. Sixteen mutants isolated by this and other methods were selected for this study. Flow microfluorometric analysis of these mutants cultured at a nonpermissive temperature (39 degrees C) for 16 h indicated that five clones were arrested in the G1 to S phase of the cell cycle, six clones were in the S to G2 phase, and two clones were arrested in the G2 phase. The remaining three clones exhibited 8C DNA content after incubation at 39 degrees C for 28 h, indicating defects in mitosis or cytokinesis. These mutants were classified into 11 complementation groups. All the mutants except for those arrested in the G2 phase and those exhibiting defects in mitosis or cytokinesis showed a rapid decrease in DNA synthesis after temperature shift-up without a decrease in RNA and protein synthesis. The polyomavirus DNA cell-free replication system, which consists of polyomavirus large tumor antigen and mouse cell extracts, was used for further characterization of these DNA ts mutants. Among these ts mutants, only the tsFT20 strain, which contains heat-labile DNA polymerase alpha, was unable to support the polyomavirus DNA replication. Analysis by DNA fiber autoradiography revealed that DNA chain elongation rates of these DNA ts mutants were not changed and that the initiation of DNA replication at the origin of replicons was impaired in the mutant cells.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of restrictive temperature on ubiquitin conjugation activity has been studied in cells of ts20, a temperature-sensitive cell cycle mutant of the Chinese hamster cell line E36. Ts20 is arrested in early G2 phase at nonpermissive temperature. Immunoblotting with antibodies to ubiquitin conjugates shows that conjugates disappear rapidly at restrictive temperatures in ts20 mutant but not in wild type E36 cells. The incorporation of 125I-ubiquitin into permeabilized ts20 cells is temperature-sensitive. Addition of extracts of another G2 phase mutant, FM3A ts85, with a temperature-sensitive ubiquitin activation enzyme (E1), to permeabilized ts20 cells at restrictive temperatures fails to complement their ubiquitin ligation activity. This indicates that the lesions in the two mutants are similar. Purified E1 from reticulocytes restores the conjugation activity of heat-inactivated permeabilized ts20 cells. Ubiquitin conjugation activity of cell-free extracts of ts20 cells was temperature-sensitive and could be restored by adding purified reticulocyte E1. Purified reticulocyte E2 or E3, on the other hand, did not restore the ubiquitin conjugation activity of heat-treated ts20 extracts. These results are consistent with the conclusion that ts20 has temperature-sensitive ubiquitin-activating enzyme (E1). The fact that two E1 mutants (ts20 and ts85) derived from different cell lines are arrested at the S/G2 boundary at restrictive temperatures strongly indicates that ubiquitin ligation is necessary for passage through this part of the cell cycle. The temperature thresholds of heat shock protein synthesis of ts20 and wild type E36 cells were identical. The implications of these findings with respect to a suggested role of ubiquitin in coupling between protein denaturation and the heat shock response are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Effects of the Mitotic Cell-Cycle Mutation cdc4 on Yeast Meiosis   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
The mitotic cell-cycle mutation cdc4 has been reported to block the initiation of nuclear DNA replication and the separation of spindle plaques after their replication. Meiosis in cdc4/cdc4 diploids is normal at the permissive temperature (25 degrees) and is arrested at the first division (one-nucleus stage) at the restrictive temperature (34 degrees or 36 degrees). Arrested cells at 34 degrees show a high degree of commitment to recombination (at least 50% of the controls) but no haploidization, while cells arrested at 36 degrees are not committed to recombination. Meiotic cells arrested at 34 degrees show a delayed and reduced synthesis of DNA (at most 40% of the control), at least half of which is probably mitochondrial. It is suggested that recombination commitment does not depend on the completion of nuclear premeiotic DNA replication in sporulation medium.--Transfer of cdc4/cdc4 cells to the restrictive temperature at the onset of sporulation produces a uniform phenotype of arrest at a 1-nucleus morphology. On the other hand, shifts of the meiotic cells to the restrictive temperature at later times produce two additional phenotypes of arrest, thus suggesting that the function of cdc4 is required at several points in meiosis (at least at three different times).  相似文献   

5.
ts ET24 cells are a novel temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant for cell proliferation of hamster BHK21 cells. The human genomic DNA which rescued the temperature-sensitive lethality of ts ET24 cells was isolated and screened for an open reading frame in the deposited human genomic library. X chromosomal DBX gene encoding the RNA helicase, DEAD-BOX X isoform, which is homologous to yeast Ded1p, was found to be defective in this mutant. The single point mutation (P267S) was localized between the Motifs I and Ia of the hamster DBX of ts ET24 cells. At the nonpermissive temperature of 39.5 degrees C, ts ET24 cells were arrested in the G1-phase and survived for more than 3 days. In ts ET24 cells, total protein synthesis was not reduced at 39.5 degrees C for 24 h, while mRNA accumulated in the nucleus after incubation at 39.5 degrees C for 17 h. The amount of cyclin A mRNA decreased in ts ET24 cells within 4 h after the temperature shift to 39.5 degrees C, consistent with the fact that the entry into the S-phase was delayed by the temperature shift.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
ts20 is a temperature-sensitive mutant cell line derived from BALB/3T3 cells. DNA synthesis in the mutant decreased progressively after an initial increase during the first 3 h at the restrictive temperature. RNA and protein synthesis increased for 20 h and remained at a high level for 40 h. Cells were arrested in S phase as determined by flow microfluorimetry, and DNA chain elongation was retarded as measured by fiber autoradiography. Infection with polyomavirus did not bypass the defect in cell DNA synthesis, and the mutant did not support virus DNA replication at the restrictive temperature. After shift down to the permissive temperature, cell DNA synthesis was restored whereas virus DNA synthesis was not. Analysis of virus DNA synthesized at the restrictive temperature showed that the synthesis of form I and replicative intermediate DNA decreased concurrently and that the rate of completion of virus DNA molecules remained constant with increasing time at the restrictive temperature. These studies indicated that the mutation inhibited ongoing DNA synthesis at a step early in elongation of nascent chains. The defect in virus and cell DNA synthesis was expressed in vitro. [3H]dTTP incorporation was reduced, consistent with the in vivo data. The addition of a high-salt extract prepared from wild-type 3T3 cells preferentially stimulated the incorporation of [3H]dTTP into the DNA of mutant cells at the restrictive temperature. A similar extract prepared from mutant cells was less effective and was more heat labile as incubation of it at the restrictive temperature for 1 h destroyed its ability to stimulate DNA synthesis in vitro, whereas wild-type extract was not inactivated until incubated at that temperature for 3 h.  相似文献   

8.
The expression of genes coding for the four core histones (H2A, H2B, H3, and H4) was studied in tsAF8 cells. These baby hamster kidney-derived cells are a temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant of the cell cycle that arrest in G1 at the restrictive temperature. When serum-deprived tsAF8 cells are stimulated with serum, they enter the S phase at the permissive temperature of 34 degrees C, but are blocked in G1 at the nonpermissive temperature of 39.6 degrees C. Northern blot analysis using cloned human histone DNA probes detected only very low levels of histone RNA either in quiescent tsAF8 cells or in cells serum stimulated at the nonpermissive temperature for 24 h. Cellular levels of histone RNA were markedly increased in cells serum stimulated at 34 degrees C for 24 h. Temperature shift-up experiments after serum stimulation of quiescent populations showed that the amount of histone RNA was related to the number of cells that entered the S phase. Those cells that synthesized histone RNA and entered the S phase were capable of dividing. This is the first demonstration in a mammalian G1-specific ts mutant that the expression of H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 histone genes depends on the entry of cells into the S phase of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

9.
Rat kidney (NRK) cells infected with a temperature-sensitive mutant of the Kirsten sarcoma virus were arrested in the G0/G1 phase of their cell cycle by incubation in serum-deficient medium at a p21-inactivating temperature of 41 degrees C. These quiescent ts K-NRK cells were then stimulated to transit G1 and initiate DNA replication by lowering the temperature to 36 degrees C, which rapidly reactivated p21. Reactivating the viral Ki-RAS protein by temperature shift led to an increase in adenylate cyclase activity in early G1 phase. The Ki-RAS protein increased the sensitivity of adenylate cyclase to guanyl nucleotides by a mechanism that seemed to involve inactivation of the enzyme's inhibitory G1 regulatory protein.  相似文献   

10.
ts 13 cells are a temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant of BHK cells that are known to arrest in G1 when shifted to the nonpermissive temperature. We have determined the entry into S of ts13 cells in five different growth conditions, namely: 1) quiescent, sparse cultures stimulated to proliferate by serum. 2) Quiescent, dense cultures stimulated by serum. 3) Quiescent, sparse cultures stimulated by trypsinization and replating. 4) Quiescent, dense cultures stimulated by trypsinization and replating. 5) Mitotic cells collected by mitotic detachment. For each different growth condition we have also determined the execution point of the mutant function, i.e. the time at which a shift-up to the nonpermissive temperature no longer prevents the entry of cells into S. The median time of entry into S and the execution point varied in different growth conditions, but the distance between the median execution point and the median time of entry into S was remarkably constant, i.e. 3.2 hr. In addition we have fused ts 13 cells cells with chick erythrocytes and studied the ability of ts13 cells in heterokaryon formation to induce DNA synthesis in chick nuclei. Although ts13 cells can induce DNA synthesis in chick nuclei at the permissive temperature, they fail to do so when fused and stimulated at the nonpermissive temperature of 39.5 degrees C.  相似文献   

11.
A temperature-sensitive mutation was isolated that blocks cilia regeneration and arrests growth in Tetrahymena thermophila. Protein and RNA synthesis and ATP production appeared to be largely unaffected at the restrictive temperature, suggesting that the mutation is specific for cilia regeneration and growth. At the restrictive temperature, mutant cells arrested at a specific point in the cell cycle, after macronuclear S phase and shortly before micronuclear mitosis. Arrested cells did not undergo nuclear divisions, DNA replication, or cytokinesis, so the mutation appears to cause true cell cycle arrest. Surprisingly, the mutation does not appear to affect micronuclear mitosis directly but rather some event(s) prior to micronuclear mitosis that must be completed before cells can complete the cell cycle. The cell cycle arrest was transiently complemented by wild-type cytoplasm exchanged during conjugation with a wild-type cell. Each starved, wild-type cell apparently contained enough rescuing factor to support an average of six cell divisions. Thus, this mutation affects assembly and/or function of at least one but not all of the microtubule-based structures in T. thermophila.  相似文献   

12.
The cytoplasm of Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains two major classes of protein-encapsulated double-stranded ribonucleic acids (dsRNA's), L and M. Replication of L and M dsRNA's was examined in cells arrested in the G1 phase by either alpha-factor, a yeast mating pheromone, or the restrictive temperature for a cell cycle mutant (cdc7). [3H]uracil was added during the arrest periods to cells prelabeled with [14C]uracil, and replication was monitored by determining the ratio of 3H/14C for purified dsRNA's. Like mitochondrial deoxyribonucleic acid, both L and M dsRNA's were synthesized in the G1 arrested cells. The replication of L dsRNA was also examined during the S phase, using cells synchronized in two different ways. Cells containing the cdc7 mutation, treated sequentially with alpha-factor and then the restrictive temperature, enter a synchronous S phase when transferred to permissive temperature. When cells entered the S phase, synthesis of L dsRNA ceased, and little or no synthesis was detected throughout the S phase. Synthesis of L dsRNA was also observed in G1 phase cells isolated from asynchronous cultures by velocity centrifugation. Again, synthesis ceased when cells entered the S phase. These results indicate that L dsRNA replication is under cell cycle control. The control differs from that of mitochondrial deoxyribonucleic acid, which replicates in all phases of the cell cycle, and from that of 2-micron DNA, a multiple-copy plasmid whose replication is confined to the S phase.  相似文献   

13.
The fission yeast Hsk1p kinase is an essential activator of DNA replication. Here we report the isolation and characterization of a novel mutant allele of the gene. Consistent with its role in the initiation of DNA synthesis, hsk1(ts) genetically interacts with several S-phase mutants. At the restrictive temperature, hsk1(ts) cells suffer abnormal S phase and loss of nuclear integrity and are sensitive to both DNA-damaging agents and replication arrest. Interestingly, hsk1(ts) mutants released to the restrictive temperature after early S-phase arrest in hydroxyurea (HU) are able to complete bulk DNA synthesis but they nevertheless undergo an abnormal mitosis. These findings indicate a second role for hsk1 subsequent to HU arrest. Consistent with a later S-phase role, hsk1(ts) is synthetically lethal with Deltarqh1 (RecQ helicase) or rad21ts (cohesin) mutants and suppressed by Deltacds1 (RAD53 kinase) mutants. We demonstrate that Hsk1p undergoes Cds1p-dependent phosphorylation in response to HU and that it is a direct substrate of purified Cds1p kinase in vitro. These results indicate that the Hsk1p kinase is a potential target of Cds1p regulation and that its activity is required after replication initiation for normal mitosis.  相似文献   

14.
A temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant, designated tsFT210, was isolated from a mouse mammary carcinoma cell line, FM3A. The tsFT210 cells grew normally at 33 degrees C (permissive temperature), but more than 80% of the cells were arrested at the G2 phase at 39 degrees C (non-permissive temperature) as revealed by flow-microfluorimetric analysis. DNA replication and synthesis of other macromolecules by this mutant seemed to be normal at 39 degrees C for at least 10 h. However, in this mutant, hyperphosphorylation of H1 histone from the G2 to M phase, which occurs in the normal cell cycle, could not be detected at the non-permissive temperature. This suggests that a gene product which is temperature-sensitive in tsFT210 cells is necessary for hyperphosphorylation of H1 histone and that this gene product may be related to chromosome condensation.  相似文献   

15.
Cultures of ts BN75, a temperature-sensitive mutant of BHK 21 cells, show a gradual biphasic drop in [3H]thymidine incorporation together with an accumulation of cells having a G2 DNA content when incubated at 39.5 degrees. However, when higher (41 degrees - 42 degrees) nonpermissive temperatures were used, the major block was in S-phase DNA synthesis. The cultures of ts BN75 shifted to 42 degrees at the start of the S phase, cell-cycle progress was arrested in the middle of S, while under these conditions wild-type BHK cells underwent at least one cycle of DNA synthesis. When ts BN75 cells growth-arrested at high temperature with a G2 DNA content were shifted to the permissive temperature (33.5 degrees C), the restart of DNA synthesis preceded the appearance of mitotic cells. These data suggest that the ts defect of ts BN75 cells might affect primarily the S phase of the cycle rather than the G2 phase.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of rat 3Y1 fibroblasts representing four separate complementation groups (3Y1tsD123, 3Y1tsF121, 3Y1tsG125, and 3Y1tsH203) are arrested mainly in the G1 phase when cells of randomly proliferating population at 33.8 degrees C are shifted to 39.8 degrees C (temperature arrest). We examined the time lag of the cellular entry into the S phase after release at 33.8 degrees C, both from the temperature arrest and from the arrest at 33.8 degrees C at a confluent cell density (density arrest). In the temperature-arrested cells, as the duration of temperature arrest increased, the time lag of entry into S phase after shift down to 33.8 degrees C was prolonged, in all four mutants. These observations suggest that the four different functional lesions, each causing arrest in the G1 phase, are also responsible for prolongation of the time lag of entry into the S phase in cells arrested in the G1 phase. The prolongation of the time lag in the temperature-arrested cultures was accelerated at a higher cell density, in medium supplemented with a lower concentration of serum, and at a higher restrictive temperature. In the density-arrested cells, as the duration of pre-exposure to 39.8 degrees C was increased, the time lag of entry into S phase at 33.8 degrees C after release from the arrest was drastically prolonged, in all four mutants. In 3Y1tsF121, 3Y1tsG125, and 3Y1tsH203, when the density-arrested cells were prestimulated by serum at 39.8 degrees C for various periods of time, the time lag of entry into S phase after release from the density arrest at 33.8 degrees C was initially shortened, and then, prolonged progressively as the period of prestimulation increased. These findings, taken together with other data, show that all four ts defects affect cells in states ranging from the deeper resting to mid- or late-G1 phase. It is suggested that events represented by these four mutants are required for entry into the S phase and normally operate in parallel but not in sequence in cells in states ranging from the deeper resting to the mid- or late-G1 phases, though they may affect each other.  相似文献   

18.
The replication of the 2 μm DNA of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been examined in cell division cycle (cdc) mutants. The 2 μm DNA does not replicate at the restrictive temperature in cells bearing the cdc28, cdc4, and cdc7 mutations which prevent passage of cells from the G1 phase into S phase. Plasmid replication also is prevented in a mating-type cells by α factor, a mating hormone which prevents cells from completing an event early in G1 phase. The 2 μm DNA ceases replication at 36 °C in a mutant harboring the cdc8 mutation, a defect in the elongation reactions of nuclear DNA replication. Plasmid replication continues at the restrictive temperature for approximately one generation in a cdc13 mutant defective in nuclear division. These results show that 2 μm DNA replication is controlled by the same genes that control the initiation and completion of nuclear DNA replication.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
The ts 2 derivative of BALB/c-3T3 mouse fibroblasts is a cell division cycle (cdc) mutant. Upon expression of the heat-sensitive defect, ts 2 cells arrest late in G1 at, or very near the G1/S traverse. This conclusion derives from three kinds of experiment. In the first the cells were brought to different stages of the cell cycle by physiological manipulation, or with specific anti-metabolites. They were then released from the resulting blocks, and their subsequent cell-cycle progression, at the permissive- and non-permissive temperature (npt), was followed. The second experiment was an execution point analysis. In the third, premature chromosome condensation was performed between metaphase HeLa cells and temperature-blocked ts 2 cells. The resulting prematurely-condensed chromosomes were largely of the morphotype of very late G1 cells. The ts 2 cells are prevented from expressing their defect by temporary incubation at 38.5 degrees C in the G0, non-cycling state and by prior arrest in early S phase, imposed by hydroxyurea treatment. Such prevention is not allowed ts 2 cells incubated at the npt in the absence of isoleucine, a procedure which brings cells to mid-G1 arrest.  相似文献   

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