Timing of Chromosome DNA Integration throughout the Yeast Cell Cycle

Author:

Tosato Valentina12,Rossi Beatrice1,Sims Jason3,Bruschi Carlo V.14

Affiliation:

1. Yeast Molecular Genetics, ICGEB-International Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, AREA Science Park, Padriciano 99, 34149 Trieste, Italy

2. Department of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Trieste, Via Giorgieri 1, 34127 Trieste, Italy

3. St. Anna Children’s Cancer Research Institute, Zimmermannplatz 10, 1090 Vienna, Austria

4. Department of Cell Biology, University of Salzburg, Hellbrunner Straße 34, 5020 Salzburg, Austria

Abstract

The dynamic mechanism of cell uptake and genomic integration of exogenous linear DNA still has to be completely clarified, especially within each phase of the cell cycle. We present a study of integration events of double-stranded linear DNA molecules harboring at their ends sequence homologies to the host’s genome, all throughout the cell cycle of the model organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae, comparing the efficiency of chromosomal integration of two types of DNA cassettes tailored for site-specific integration and bridge-induced translocation. Transformability increases in S phase regardless of the sequence homologies, while the efficiency of chromosomal integration during a specific cycle phase depends upon the genomic targets. Moreover, the frequency of a specific translocation between chromosomes XV and VIII strongly increased during DNA synthesis under the control of Pol32 polymerase. Finally, in the null POL32 double mutant, different pathways drove the integration in the various phases of the cell cycle and bridge-induced translocation was possible outside the S phase even without Pol32. The discovery of this cell-cycle dependent regulation of specific pathways of DNA integration, associated with an increase of ROS levels following translocation events, is a further demonstration of a sensing ability of the yeast cell in determining a cell-cycle-related choice of DNA repair pathways under stress.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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