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Mapping ubiquitination sites of S. cerevisiae Mcm10
Authors:Tianji Zhang  Brandy L Fultz  Sapna Das-Bradoo  Anja-Katrin Bielinsky
Institution:1. Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Biophysics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, United States;2. Department of Natural Sciences, College of Science and Health Professions, Northeastern State University, 3100 East New Orleans Street, Broken Arrow, OK 74014, United States
Abstract:Minichromosome maintenance protein (Mcm) 10 is a part of the eukaryotic replication machinery and highly conserved throughout evolution. As a multivalent DNA scaffold, Mcm10 coordinates the action of proteins that are indispensable for lagging strand synthesis, such as the replication clamp, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). The binding between Mcm10 and PCNA serves an essential function during DNA elongation and is mediated by the ubiquitination of Mcm10. Here we map lysine 372 as the primary attachment site for ubiquitin on S. cerevisiae Mcm10. Moreover, we identify five additional lysines that can be ubiquitinated. Mutation of lysine 372 to arginine ablates ubiquitination of overexpressed protein and causes sensitivity to the replication inhibitor hydroxyurea in cells that are S-phase checkpoint compromised. Together, these findings reveal the high selectivity of the ubiquitination machinery that targets Mcm10 and that ubiquitination has a role in suppressing replication stress.
Keywords:DNA replication  Mcm10  PCNA  Ubiquitination  9-1-1 checkpoint clamp
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