Minichromosome Maintenance Proteins Interact with Checkpoint and Recombination Proteins To Promote S-Phase Genome Stability

Author:

Bailis Julie M.1,Luche Douglas D.2,Hunter Tony1,Forsburg Susan L.12

Affiliation:

1. Molecular and Cell Biology Laboratory, The Salk Institute, 10010 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, California 92037

2. Molecular and Computational Biology Section, University of Southern California, 1050 Childs Way RRI 201B, Los Angeles, California 90089-2910

Abstract

ABSTRACT The minichromosome maintenance (MCM) complex plays essential, conserved roles throughout DNA synthesis: first, as a component of the prereplication complex at origins and, then, as a helicase associated with replication forks. Here we use fission yeast ( Schizosaccharomyces pombe ) as a model to demonstrate a role for the MCM complex in protecting replication fork structure and promoting recovery from replication arrest. Loss of MCM function generates lethal double-strand breaks at sites of DNA synthesis during replication elongation, suggesting replication fork collapse. MCM function also maintains the stability of forks stalled by hydroxyurea that activate the replication checkpoint. In cells where the checkpoint is activated, Mcm4 binds the Cds1 kinase and undergoes Cds1-dependent phosphorylation. MCM proteins also interact with proteins involved in homologous recombination, which promotes recovery from arrest by ensuring normal mitosis. We suggest that the MCM complex links replication fork stabilization with checkpoint arrest and recovery through direct interactions with checkpoint and recombination proteins and that this role in S-phase genome stability is conserved from yeast to human cells.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

Reference85 articles.

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3. Bailis, J. M., and S. L. Forsburg. 2004. MCM proteins: DNA damage, mutagenesis, repair. Curr. Opin. Gen. Dev.14:17-21.

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