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Differential arrival of leading and lagging strand DNA polymerases at fission yeast telomeres
Authors:Bettina A Moser  Lakxmi Subramanian  Ya‐Ting Chang  Chiaki Noguchi  Eishi Noguchi  Toru M Nakamura
Affiliation:1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA;2. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Abstract:To maintain genomic integrity, telomeres must undergo switches from a protected state to an accessible state that allows telomerase recruitment. To better understand how telomere accessibility is regulated in fission yeast, we analysed cell cycle‐dependent recruitment of telomere‐specific proteins (telomerase Trt1, Taz1, Rap1, Pot1 and Stn1), DNA replication proteins (DNA polymerases, MCM, RPA), checkpoint protein Rad26 and DNA repair protein Nbs1 to telomeres. Quantitative chromatin immunoprecipitation studies revealed that MCM, Nbs1 and Stn1 could be recruited to telomeres in the absence of telomere replication in S‐phase. In contrast, Trt1, Pot1, RPA and Rad26 failed to efficiently associate with telomeres unless telomeres are actively replicated. Unexpectedly, the leading strand DNA polymerase ε (Polε) arrived at telomeres earlier than the lagging strand DNA polymerases α (Polα) and δ (Polδ). Recruitment of RPA and Rad26 to telomeres matched arrival of DNA Polε, whereas S‐phase specific recruitment of Trt1, Pot1 and Stn1 matched arrival of DNA Polα. Thus, the conversion of telomere states involves an unanticipated intermediate step where lagging strand synthesis is delayed until telomerase is recruited.
Keywords:cell cycle  DNA polymerase  DNA replication  pot1  telomerase
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