Affiliation:
1. Department of Genome Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
2. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Eukaryotic chromosomal replication is a complicated process with many origins firing at different efficiencies and times during S phase. Prereplication complexes are assembled on all origins in G
1
phase, and yet only a subset of complexes is activated during S phase by DDK (for Dbf4-dependent kinase) (Cdc7-Dbf4). The yeast
mcm5-bob1
(P83L) mutation bypasses DDK but results in reduced intrinsic firing efficiency at 11 endogenous origins and at origins located on minichromosomes. Origin efficiency may result from Mcm5 protein assuming an altered conformation, as predicted from the atomic structure of an archaeal MCM (for minichromosome maintenance) homologue. Similarly, an intragenic mutation in a residue predicted to interact with P83L suppresses the
mcm5-bob1
bypass phenotype. We propose DDK phosphorylation of the MCM complex normally results in a single, highly active conformation of Mcm5, whereas the
mcm5-bob1
mutation produces a number of conformations, only one of which is permissive for origin activation. Random adoption of these alternate states by the
mcm5-bob1
protein can explain both how origin firing occurs independently of DDK and why origin efficiency is reduced. Because similar mutations in
mcm2
and
mcm4
cannot bypass DDK, Mcm5 protein may be a unique Mcm protein that is the final target of DDK regulation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
49 articles.
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