Author:
Ivessa Andreas S.,Zhou Jin-Qiu,Schulz Vince P.,Monson Ellen K.,Zakian Virginia A.
Abstract
In wild-type Saccharomyces cerevisiae, replication forks slowed during their passage through telomeric C1–3A/TG1–3 tracts. This slowing was greatly exacerbated in the absence of RRM3, shown here to encode a 5′ to 3′ DNA helicase. Rrm3p-dependent fork progression was seen at a modified Chromosome VII-L telomere, at the natural X-bearing Chromosome III-L telomere, and at Y‘-bearing telomeres. Loss of Rrm3p also resulted in replication fork pausing at specific sites in subtelomeric DNA, such as at inactive replication origins, and at internal tracts of C1–3A/TG1–3 DNA. The ATPase/helicase activity of Rrm3p was required for its role in telomeric and subtelomeric DNA replication. Because Rrm3p was telomere-associated in vivo, it likely has a direct role in telomere replication.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Developmental Biology,Genetics