Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry and Kaplan Cancer Center, New York University Medical Center, New York, New York 10016
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We report on a novel role for a pre-mRNA splicing component in genome stability. The Hpr1 protein, a component of an RNA polymerase II complex and required for transcription elongation, is also required for genome stability. Deletion of
HPR1
results in a 1,000-fold increase in genome instability, detected as direct-repeat instability. This instability can be suppressed by the high-copy-number
SUB2
gene, which is the
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
homologue of the human splicing factor hUAP56. Although
SUB2
is essential, conditional alleles grown at the permissive temperature complement the essential function of
SUB2
yet reveal nonessential phenotypes. These studies have uncovered a role for
SUB2
in preventing genome instability. The genomic instability observed in
sub2
mutants can be suppressed by high-copy-number
HPR1
. A deletion mutant of
CDC73
, a component of a PolII complex, is also unstable for direct repeats. This too is suppressed by high-copy-number
SUB2
. Thus, defects in both the transcriptional machinery and the pre-mRNA splicing machinery can be sources of genome instability. The ability of a pre-mRNA splicing factor to suppress the hyperrecombination phenotype of a defective PolII complex raises the possibility of integrating transcription, RNA processing, and genome stability or a second role for
SUB2
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
51 articles.
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