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  4. 1998
Showing papers on "Origin recognition complex published in 1998"
Journal Article•10.1126/SCIENCE.282.5395.1893•
Linkage of ATM to Cell Cycle Regulation by the Chk2 Protein Kinase

[...]

Shuhei Matsuoka1, Mingxia Huang, Stephen J. Elledge•
Howard Hughes Medical Institute1
04 Dec 1998-Science
TL;DR: Chk2, the mammalian homolog of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rad53 and Schizosac charomyces pombe Cds1 protein kinases required for the DNA damage and replication checkpoints, was identified and phosphorylated and activated in response to replication blocks and DNA damage.
Abstract: In response to DNA damage and replication blocks, cells prevent cell cycle progression through the control of critical cell cycle regulators. We identified Chk2, the mammalian homolog of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rad53 and Schizosaccharomyces pombe Cds1 protein kinases required for the DNA damage and replication checkpoints. Chk2 was rapidly phosphorylated and activated in response to replication blocks and DNA damage; the response to DNA damage occurred in an ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM)-dependent manner. In vitro, Chk2 phosphorylated Cdc25C on serine-216, a site known to be involved in negative regulation of Cdc25C. This is the same site phosphorylated by the protein kinase Chk1, which suggests that, in response to DNA damage and DNA replicational stress, Chk1 and Chk2 may phosphorylate Cdc25C to prevent entry into mitosis.

1,457 citations

Journal Article•10.1128/MMBR.62.2.434-464.1998•
Replication and control of circular bacterial plasmids.

[...]

Gloria del Solar1, Rafael Giraldo1, María Jesús Ruiz-Echevarría1, Manuel Espinosa1, Ramón Díaz-Orejas1 •
Spanish National Research Council1
01 Jun 1998-Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews
TL;DR: Most of the current knowledge on plasmid replication and its control is based on the results of analyses performed with pure cultures under steady-state growth conditions, and sets important parameters needed to understand the maintenance of these genetic elements in mixed populations and under environmental conditions.
Abstract: SUMMARY An essential feature of bacterial plasmids is their ability to replicate as autonomous genetic elements in a controlled way within the host. Therefore, they can be used to explore the mechanisms involved in DNA replication and to analyze the different strategies that couple DNA replication to other critical events in the cell cycle. In this review, we focus on replication and its control in circular plasmids. Plasmid replication can be conveniently divided into three stages: initiation, elongation, and termination. The inability of DNA polymerases to initiate de novo replication makes necessary the independent generation of a primer. This is solved, in circular plasmids, by two main strategies: (i) opening of the strands followed by RNA priming (theta and strand displacement replication) or (ii) cleavage of one of the DNA strands to generate a 3′-OH end (rolling-circle replication). Initiation is catalyzed most frequently by one or a few plasmid-encoded initiation proteins that recognize plasmid-specific DNA sequences and determine the point from which replication starts (the origin of replication). In some cases, these proteins also participate directly in the generation of the primer. These initiators can also play the role of pilot proteins that guide the assembly of the host replisome at the plasmid origin. Elongation of plasmid replication is carried out basically by DNA polymerase III holoenzyme (and, in some cases, by DNA polymerase I at an early stage), with the participation of other host proteins that form the replisome. Termination of replication has specific requirements and implications for reinitiation, studies of which have started. The initiation stage plays an additional role: it is the stage at which mechanisms controlling replication operate. The objective of this control is to maintain a fixed concentration of plasmid molecules in a growing bacterial population (duplication of the plasmid pool paced with duplication of the bacterial population). The molecules involved directly in this control can be (i) RNA (antisense RNA), (ii) DNA sequences (iterons), or (iii) antisense RNA and proteins acting in concert. The control elements maintain an average frequency of one plasmid replication per plasmid copy per cell cycle and can “sense” and correct deviations from this average. Most of the current knowledge on plasmid replication and its control is based on the results of analyses performed with pure cultures under steady-state growth conditions. This knowledge sets important parameters needed to understand the maintenance of these genetic elements in mixed populations and under environmental conditions.

970 citations

Journal Article•10.1146/ANNUREV.BIOCHEM.67.1.721•
The dna replication fork in eukaryotic cells

[...]

Shou Waga1, Bruce Stillman•
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory1
01 Jan 1998-Annual Review of Biochemistry
TL;DR: Biochemical studies, principally of plasmid DNAs containing the Simian Virus 40 origin of DNA replication, and yeast genetic studies have uncovered the fundamental mechanisms of replication fork progression.
Abstract: Replication of the two template strands at eukaryotic cell DNA replication forks is a highly coordinated process that ensures accurate and efficient genome duplication. Biochemical studies, principally of plasmid DNAs containing the Simian Virus 40 origin of DNA replication, and yeast genetic studies have uncovered the fundamental mechanisms of replication fork progression. At least two different DNA polymerases, a single-stranded DNA-binding protein, a clamp-loading complex, and a polymerase clamp combine to replicate DNA. Okazaki fragment synthesis involves a DNA polymerase-switching mechanism, and maturation occurs by the recruitment of specific nucleases, a helicase, and a ligase. The process of DNA replication is also coupled to cell-cycle progression and to DNA repair to maintain genome integrity.

860 citations

Journal Article•10.1101/GAD.12.18.2956•
Recovery from DNA replicational stress is the essential function of the S-phase checkpoint pathway

[...]

Brian A. Desany1, Annette A. Alcasabas, Jeffrey B. Bachant, Stephen J. Elledge•
Baylor College of Medicine1
15 Sep 1998-Genes & Development
TL;DR: Analysis of viable null alleles revealed that Mec1 plays a greater role in response to inhibition of DNA synthesis than Rad53, suggesting that this checkpoint pathway plays an important role in the maintenance of DNA synthetic capabilities when DNA replication is stressed.
Abstract: RAD53 and MEC1 are essential genes required for the transcriptional and cell cycle responses to DNA damage and DNA replication blocks. We have examined the essential function of these genes and found that their lethality but not their checkpoint defects can be suppressed by increased expression of genes encoding ribonucleotide reductase. Analysis of viable null alleles revealed that Mec1 plays a greater role in response to inhibition of DNA synthesis than Rad53. The loss of survival in mec1 and rad53 null or point mutants in response to transient inhibition of DNA synthesis is not a result of inappropriate anaphase entry but primarily to an inability to complete chromosome replication. We propose that this checkpoint pathway plays an important role in the maintenance of DNA synthetic capabilities when DNA replication is stressed.

483 citations

Journal Article•10.1101/GAD.12.14.2120•
E2F3 activity is regulated during the cell cycle and is required for the induction of S phase

[...]

Gustavo Leone1, James DeGregori, Zhen Yan, Laszlo Jakoi, Seiichi Ishida, R. Sanders Williams, Joseph R. Nevins •
Howard Hughes Medical Institute1
15 Jul 1998-Genes & Development
TL;DR: It is proposed that E2F3 activity plays an important role during the cell cycle of proliferating cells, controlling the expression of genes whose products are rate limiting for initiation of DNA replication, thereby imparting a more dramatic control of entry into S phase than would otherwise be achieved by post-transcriptional control alone.
Abstract: Previous work has demonstrated the important role of E2F transcription activity in the induction of S phase during the transition from quiescence to proliferation. In addition to the E2F-dependent activation of a number of genes encoding DNA replication activities such as DNA Pol a, we now show that the majority of genes encoding initiation proteins, including Cdc6 and the Mcm proteins, are activated following the stimulation of cell growth and are regulated by E2F. The transcription of a subset of these genes, which includes Cdc6, cyclin E, and cdk2, is also regulated during the cell cycle. Moreover, whereas overall E2F DNA-binding activity accumulates during the initial G1 following a growth stimulus, only E2F3-binding activity reaccumulates at subsequent G1/S transitions, coincident with the expression of the cell-cycle-regulated subset of E2F-target genes. Finally, we show that immunodepletion of E2F3 activity inhibits the induction of S phase in proliferating cells. We propose that E2F3 activity plays an important role during the cell cycle of proliferating cells, controlling the expression of genes whose products are rate limiting for initiation of DNA replication, thereby imparting a more dramatic control of entry into S phase than would otherwise be achieved by post-transcriptional control alone.

412 citations

Journal Article•10.1073/PNAS.95.1.120•
Negative control of bacterial DNA replication by a cell cycle regulatory protein that binds at the chromosome origin

[...]

Kim C. Quon1, Bing Yang, Ibrahim J. Domian, Lucy Shapiro, Gregory T. Marczynski •
Stanford University1
06 Jan 1998-Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
TL;DR: The CtrA protein, a member of the response regulator family of the two-component signal transduction system, controls multiple cell cycle processes in Caulobacter and is present in swarmer cells but absent from stalked cells, and its mediated repression restricts replication to the stalked cell type.
Abstract: Caulobacter crescentus divides asymmetrically generating two distinct cell types at each cell division: a stalked cell competent for DNA replication, and a swarmer cell that is unable to initiate DNA replication until it differentiates into a stalked cell later in the cell cycle. The CtrA protein, a member of the response regulator family of the two-component signal transduction system, controls multiple cell cycle processes in Caulobacter and is present in swarmer cells but absent from stalked cells. We report that CtrA binds five sites within the chromosome replication origin in vitro. These sites overlap an essential DnaA box and a promoter in the origin that is essential for replication initiation. Analysis of mutant alleles of ctrA and point mutations in one of the CtrA binding sites in the origin demonstrate that CtrA represses replication in vivo. CtrA-mediated repression at the origin thus restricts replication to the stalked cell type. Thus, the direct coupling of chromosome replication with the cell cycle is mediated by the ubiquitous two-component signaling proteins.

359 citations

Journal Article•10.1126/SCIENCE.280.5363.593•
Formation of a Preinitiation Complex by S-phase Cyclin CDK-Dependent Loading of Cdc45p onto Chromatin

[...]

Lee Zou1, Bruce Stillman1•
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory1
24 Apr 1998-Science
TL;DR: Binding of Cdc45p to chromatin depends on Clb-Cdc28 kinase activity as well as functional Cdc6p and Mcm2p, which suggests that CDC45p associates with the prereplication complex after activation of S-phase cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs).
Abstract: Cdc45p, a protein essential for initiation of DNA replication, associates with chromatin after "start" in late G1 and during the S phase of the cell cycle Binding of Cdc45p to chromatin depends on Clb-Cdc28 kinase activity as well as functional Cdc6p and Mcm2p, which suggests that Cdc45p associates with the prereplication complex after activation of S-phase cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) As indicated by the timing and the CDK dependence, binding of Cdc45p to chromatin is crucial for commitment to initiation of DNA replication During S phase, Cdc45p physically interacts with minichromosome maintenance (MCM) proteins on chromatin; however, dissociation of Cdc45p from chromatin is slower than that of MCMs, which indicates that the proteins are released by different mechanisms

356 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/S1097-2765(00)80052-0•
Regulated Chromosomal DNA Replication in the Absence of a Nucleus

[...]

Johannes C. Walter1, Li Sun1, John Newport1•
University of California, San Diego1
01 Mar 1998-Molecular Cell
TL;DR: Results indicate that the role of the nuclear envelope in DNA replication is to concentrate activators and inhibitors of replication inside the nucleus and provide direct evidence that metazoans use the same strategy as yeast to activate DNA replication and to restrict it to a single round per cell cycle.

296 citations

Journal Article•10.1093/EMBOJ/17.8.2426•
Initiation of DNA replication at CpG islands in mammalian chromosomes

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Sonia Delgado1, María Gómez1, Adrian Bird, Francisco Antequera1•
Spanish National Research Council1
15 Apr 1998-The EMBO Journal
TL;DR: The results imply that CpG islands are initiation sites for both transcription and DNA replication, and may represent genomic footprints of replication initiation.
Abstract: CpG islands are G+C-rich regions approximately 1 kb long that are free of methylation and contain the promoters of many mammalian genes. Analysis of in vivo replication intermediates at three hamster genes and one human gene showed that the CpG island regions, but not their flanks, were present in very short nascent strands, suggesting that they are replication origins (ORIs). CpG island-like fragments were enriched in a population of short nascent strands from human erythroleukaemic cells, suggesting that islands constitute a significant fraction of endogenous ORIs. Correspondingly, bulk CpG islands were found to replicate coordinately early in S phase. Our results imply that CpG islands are initiation sites for both transcription and DNA replication, and may represent genomic footprints of replication initiation.

254 citations

Journal Article•10.1016/S1097-2765(00)80110-0•
Nucleotide-dependent prereplicative complex assembly by Cdc6p, a homolog of eukaryotic and prokaryotic clamp-loaders.

[...]

Gordon R. Perkins1, John F.X. Diffley1•
University of Cambridge1
01 Jul 1998-Molecular Cell
TL;DR: It is shown that Cdc6p exhibits significant sequence similarity to subunits of eukaryotic and prokaryotic clamp-loaders, which load ring-shaped DNA polymerase processivity factors onto DNA in an analogous reaction, suggesting that CDC6p and the clamp- loaders are members of a superfamily of nucleotide-dependent loading factors.

219 citations

Journal Article•10.1093/EMBOJ/17.13.3786•
DNA ligase I is recruited to sites of DNA replication by an interaction with proliferating cell nuclear antigen: identification of a common targeting mechanism for the assembly of replication factories

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Alessandra Montecucco1, Rossella Rossi1, David S. Levin2, Ronald K. Gary3, Min Soo Park3, Teresa A. Motycka2, Giovanni Ciarrocchi1, Antonello Villa4, Giuseppe Biamonti1, Alan E. Tomkinson2 •
University of Pavia1, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio2, Los Alamos National Laboratory3, University of Milan4
01 Jul 1998-The EMBO Journal
TL;DR: It is proposed that, in addition to functioning as a DNA polymerase processivity factor, PCNA plays a central role in the recruitment and stable association of DNA replication proteins at replication factories.
Abstract: In mammalian cells, DNA replication occurs at discrete nuclear sites termed replication factories. Here we demonstrate that DNA ligase I and the large subunit of replication factor C (RF-C p140) have a homologous sequence of approximately 20 amino acids at their N-termini that functions as a replication factory targeting sequence (RFTS). This motif consists of two boxes: box 1 contains the sequence IxxFF whereas box 2 is rich in positively charged residues. N-terminal fragments of DNA ligase I and the RF-C large subunit that contain the RFTS both interact with proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) in vitro. Moreover, the RFTS of DNA ligase I and of the RF-C large subunit is necessary and sufficient for the interaction with PCNA. Both subnuclear targeting and PCNA binding by the DNA ligase I RFTS are abolished by replacement of the adjacent phenylalanine residues within box 1. Since sequences similar to the RFTS/PCNA-binding motif have been identified in other DNA replication enzymes and in p21(CIP1/WAF1), we propose that, in addition to functioning as a DNA polymerase processivity factor, PCNA plays a central role in the recruitment and stable association of DNA replication proteins at replication factories.
Journal Article•10.1128/MCB.18.5.2748•
Negative Regulation of DNA Replication by the Retinoblastoma Protein Is Mediated by Its Association with MCM7

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Jacqueline M. Sterner, Susan Dew-Knight, Christine Musahl1, Sally Kornbluth2, Jonathan M. Horowitz •
University of Konstanz1, Duke University2
01 May 1998-Molecular and Cellular Biology
TL;DR: These data provide the first evidence that Rb and Rb-related proteins can directly regulate DNA replication and that components of licensing factor are targets of the products of tumor suppressor genes.
Abstract: A yeast two-hybrid screen was employed to identify human proteins that specifically bind the amino-terminal 400 amino acids of the retinoblastoma (Rb) protein. Two independent cDNAs resulting from this screen were found to encode the carboxy-terminal 137 amino acids of MCM7, a member of a family of proteins that comprise replication licensing factor. Full-length Rb and MCM7 form protein complexes in vitro, and the amino termini of two Rb-related proteins, p107 and p130, also bind MCM7. Protein complexes between Rb and MCM7 were also detected in anti-Rb immunoprecipitates prepared from human cells. The amino-termini of Rb and p130 strongly inhibited DNA replication in an MCM7-dependent fashion in a Xenopus in vitro DNA replication assay system. These data provide the first evidence that Rb and Rb-related proteins can directly regulate DNA replication and that components of licensing factor are targets of the products of tumor suppressor genes.
Journal Article•10.1016/S0092-8674(00)81740-7•
The structure of supercoiled intermediates in DNA replication.

[...]

Brian J. Peter1, Chris Ullsperger1, Hiroshi Hiasa2, Kenneth J. Marians2, Nicholas R. Cozzarelli1 •
University of California, Berkeley1, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center2
18 Sep 1998-Cell
TL;DR: The structure of replication intermediates accumulated by Tus-induced arrest of plasmid DNA replication at termination sites is studied to explain why previous studies with prokaryotic and eukaryotic replication intermediate discerned only supercoiling in the unreplicated portion.
Journal Article•10.1128/MCB.18.10.6102•
Sld2, which interacts with Dpb11 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, is required for chromosomal DNA replication.

[...]

Yoichiro Kamimura1, Hiroshi Masumoto1, Akio Sugino1, Hiroyuki Araki1•
Osaka University1
01 Oct 1998-Molecular and Cellular Biology
TL;DR: Results strongly suggest the involvement of the Dpb11-Sld2 complex in a step close to the initiation of DNA replication, as the bubble-shaped replication intermediates formed in the region of the autonomously replicating sequence reduced quickly after a temperature shift.
Abstract: The DPB11 gene, which genetically interacts with DNA polymerase II (epsilon), one of three replicative DNA polymerases, is required for DNA replication and the S phase checkpoint in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. To identify factors interacting with Dbp11, we have isolated sld (synthetically lethal with dpb11-1) mutations which fall into six complementation groups (sld1 to -6). In this study, we characterized SLD2, encoding an essential 52-kDa protein. High-copy SLD2 suppressed the thermosensitive growth defect caused by dpb11-1. Conversely, high-copy DPB11 suppressed the temperature-sensitive growth defect caused by sld2-6. The interaction between Sld2 and Dpb11 was detected in a two-hybrid assay. This interaction was evident at 25 degreesC but not at 34 degreesC when Sld2-6 or Dpb11-1 replaced its wild-type protein. No interaction between Sld2-6 and Dpb11-1 could be detected even at 25 degreesC. Immunoprecipitation experiments confirmed that Dpb11 physically interacts with Sld2. sld2-6 cells were defective in DNA replication at the restrictive temperature, as were dpb11-1 cells. Further, in dpb11-1 and sld2-6 cells, the bubble-shaped replication intermediates formed in the region of the autonomously replicating sequence reduced quickly after a temperature shift. These results strongly suggest the involvement of the Dpb11-Sld2 complex in a step close to the initiation of DNA replication.
Journal Article•10.1128/JVI.72.9.7407-7419.1998•
A C-terminal helicase domain of the human papillomavirus E1 protein binds E2 and the DNA polymerase alpha-primase p68 subunit.

[...]

Philip J. Masterson1, Margaret Stanley1, Alan P. Lewis, Michael A. Romanos•
University of Cambridge1
01 Sep 1998-Journal of Virology
TL;DR: A structural model of this domain based on the X-ray structures of the hepatitis C virus and Bacillus stearothermophilus helicases is generated, suggesting that it is multifunctional and critical to several stages of HPV DNA replication.
Abstract: The human papillomavirus (HPV) E1 and E2 proteins bind cooperatively to the viral origin of replication (ori), forming an E1-E2-ori complex that is essential for initiation of DNA replication. All other replication proteins, including DNA polymerase alpha-primase (polalpha-primase), are derived from the host cell. We have carried out a detailed analysis of the interactions of HPV type 16 (HPV-16) E1 with E2, ori, and the four polalpha-primase subunits. Deletion analysis showed that a C-terminal region of E1 (amino acids [aa] 432 to 583 or 617) is required for E2 binding. HPV-16 E1 was unable to bind the ori in the absence of E2, but the same C-terminal domain of E1 was sufficient to tether E1 to the ori via E2. Of the polalpha-primase subunits, only p68 bound E1, and binding was competitive with E2. The E1 region required (aa 397 to 583) was the same as that required for E2 binding but additionally contained 34 N-terminal residues. In confirmation of these differences, we found that a monoclonal antibody, mapping adjacent to the N-terminal junction of the p68-binding region, blocked E1-p68 but not E1-E2 binding. Sequence alignments and secondary-structure prediction for HPV-16 E1 and other superfamily 3 (SF3) viral helicases closely parallel the mapping data in suggesting that aa 439 to 623 constitute a discrete helicase domain. Assuming a common nucleoside triphosphate-binding fold, we have generated a structural model of this domain based on the X-ray structures of the hepatitis C virus and Bacillus stearothermophilus (SF2) helicases. The modelling closely matches the deletion analysis in suggesting that this region of E1 is indeed a structural domain, and our results suggest that it is multifunctional and critical to several stages of HPV DNA replication.
Journal Article•10.1006/BBRC.1998.8202•
Complex Formation of NS5B with NS3 and NS4A Proteins of Hepatitis C Virus

[...]

Satoshi Ishido1, T. Fujita1, Hak Hotta1•
Kobe University1
06 Mar 1998-Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
TL;DR: The results suggest that NS3, NS4A and NS5B interact with each other to form a complex that functions as part of the replication machinery of HCV.
Journal Article•10.1126/SCIENCE.279.5347.95•
Discrete Start Sites for DNA Synthesis in the Yeast ARS1 Origin

[...]

Anja Katrin Bielinsky1, Susan A. Gerbi1•
Brown University1
02 Jan 1998-Science
TL;DR: The ARS1 origin of Saccharomyces cerevisiae showed a transition from discontinuous to continuous DNA synthesis in an 18-base pair region from within element B1 toward B2, adjacent to the binding site for the origin recognition complex, the putative initiator protein.
Abstract: Sites of DNA synthesis initiation have been detected at the nucleotide level in a yeast origin of bidirectional replication with the use of replication initiation point mapping. The ARS1 origin of Saccharomyces cerevisiae showed a transition from discontinuous to continuous DNA synthesis in an 18-base pair region (nucleotides 828 to 845) from within element B1 toward B2, adjacent to the binding site for the origin recognition complex, the putative initiator protein.
Journal Article•10.1038/1263•
Replication focus-forming activity 1 and the Werner syndrome gene product

[...]

Hong Yan1, Chin-Yi Chen1, Ryuji Kobayashi2, John Newport3•
Fox Chase Cancer Center1, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory2, University of California, San Diego3
01 Aug 1998-Nature Genetics
TL;DR: Using Xenopus laevis egg extracts, a 170-kD protein, focus-forming activity 1 (FFA-1), which is required for the formation of replication foci has DNA-helicase activity and is a homologue of the human Werner syndrome gene product WRN, a protein associated with premature ageing in humans.
Abstract: The initiation of DNA replication involves a minimum of four factors: a specific DNA sequence (origin), an initiator protein which binds to the origin, a helicase that unwinds the origin and a protein that binds single-stranded DNA that stabilizes the unwound origin. In eukaryotic cells, the origin recognition complex (ORC) is the initiator protein and replication protein A (RPA; ref. 3) is the single-stranded DNA-binding protein. However, the helicase has not been identified and the nature of origins remains elusive, except in the case of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A unique feature of eukaryotic DNA replication is that it occurs at a few-hundred discrete foci. It has thus been proposed that a real origin must contain a specific DNA sequence and must be attached to replication foci. Using Xenopus laevis egg extracts, we have identified and purified a 170-kD protein, focus-forming activity 1 (FFA-1), which is required for the formation of replication foci. Here we report that FFA-1 has DNA-helicase activity. Moreover, it is a homologue of the human Werner syndrome gene product WRN, a protein associated with premature ageing in humans.
Journal Article•10.1093/EMBOJ/17.23.7044•
Recruitment and loading of the E1 initiator protein: an ATP-dependent process catalysed by a transcription factor.

[...]

Cyril M. Sanders1, Arne Stenlund1•
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory1
01 Dec 1998-The EMBO Journal
TL;DR: It is shown that the transcription factor E2 acts to assemble E1 into a complex active for ori distortion in two steps, which may be a general strategy to accomplish specific positioning of protein complexes with low sequence specificity.
Abstract: Initiation of DNA replication critically depends on ori recognition as well as on catalytic activities of the initiator complex. For replication of papillomaviruses the catalytic activities for initiation are provided by the E1 protein. Here, we show that the transcription factor E2 acts to assemble E1 into a complex active for ori distortion in two steps. First, cooperative DNA binding of E1 and E2 generates a sequence-specific ori recognition complex. In the second ATP-dependent step, E2 is displaced and additional E1 molecules are incorporated. The net result is a final complex with low sequence specificity deposited onto a specific sequence in the DNA. This may be a general strategy to accomplish specific positioning of protein complexes with low sequence specificity.
Journal Article•10.1074/JBC.273.46.30704•
Human Hsp70 and Hsp40 Chaperone Proteins Facilitate Human Papillomavirus-11 E1 Protein Binding to the Origin and Stimulate Cell-free DNA Replication*

[...]

Jen-Sing Liu, Shu-Ru Kuo, Alexander M. Makhov1, Douglas M. Cyr2, Jack D. Griffith1, Thomas R. Broker, Louise T. Chow •
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill1, University of Alabama at Birmingham2
13 Nov 1998-Journal of Biological Chemistry
TL;DR: Results demonstrate that, as in prokaryotes, chaperones play an important role in the assembly of preinitiation complexes on the origin of human papillomavirus DNA.
Journal Article•10.1083/JCB.142.2.307•
Distinct Cytoplasmic and Nuclear Fractions of Drosophila Heterochromatin Protein 1: Their Phosphorylation Levels and Associations with Origin Recognition Complex Proteins

[...]

Da Wei Huang1, Laura Fanti2, Daniel T.S. Pak2, Michael R. Botchan2, Sergio Pimpinelli2, Rebecca Kellum2 •
McGill University1, University of California, Berkeley2
27 Jul 1998-Journal of Cell Biology
TL;DR: A role for the ORC-containing oligomers in localizing HP1 into Drosophila heterochromatin that is strikingly similar to the role of ORC in recruiting the Sir1 protein to silencing nucleation sites in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is supported.
Abstract: The distinct structural properties of heterochromatin accommodate a diverse group of vital chromosome functions, yet we have only rudimentary molecular details of its structure. A powerful tool in the analyses of its structure in Drosophila has been a group of mutations that reverse the repressive effect of heterochromatin on the expression of a gene placed next to it ectopically. Several genes from this group are known to encode proteins enriched in heterochromatin. The best characterized of these is the heterochromatin-associated protein, HP1. HP1 has no known DNA-binding activity, hence its incorporation into heterochromatin is likely to be dependent upon other proteins. To examine HP1 interacting proteins, we isolated three distinct oligomeric species of HP1 from the cytoplasm of early Drosophila embryos and analyzed their compositions. The two larger oligomers share two properties with the fraction of HP1 that is most tightly associated with the chromatin of interphase nuclei: an underphosphorylated HP1 isoform profile and an association with subunits of the origin recognition complex (ORC). We also found that HP1 localization into heterochromatin is disrupted in mutants for the ORC2 subunit. These findings support a role for the ORC-containing oligomers in localizing HP1 into Drosophila heterochromatin that is strikingly similar to the role of ORC in recruiting the Sir1 protein to silencing nucleation sites in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Journal Article•10.1128/JVI.72.4.2777-2787.1998•
Cellular Proteins Required for Adeno-Associated Virus DNA Replication in the Absence of Adenovirus Coinfection

[...]

Tie-Hua Ni1, William F. McDonald, Irene Zolotukhin, Thomas Melendy2, Shou Waga2, Bruce Stillman2, Nicholas Muzyczka3 •
Stony Brook University1, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory2, University of Florida3
01 Apr 1998-Journal of Virology
TL;DR: It is discovered that HeLa cell extracts grown to high density can occasionally display as much in vitro replication activity as Ad-infected extracts and confirmed previous genetic analyses which suggested that no Ad-encoded proteins were absolutely essential for AAV DNA replication and that the uninfected extracts should be useful for studying the differences between helper-dependent and helper-independent AAVDNA replication.
Abstract: We previously reported the development of an in vitro adeno-associated virus (AAV) DNA replication system. The system required one of the p5 Rep proteins encoded by AAV (either Rep78 or Rep68) and a crude adenovirus (Ad)-infected HeLa cell cytoplasmic extract to catalyze origin of replication-dependent AAV DNA replication. However, in addition to fully permissive DNA replication, which occurs in the presence of Ad, AAV is also capable of partially permissive DNA replication in the absence of the helper virus in cells that have been treated with genotoxic agents. Limited DNA replication also occurs in the absence of Ad during the process of establishing a latent infection. In an attempt to isolate uninfected extracts that would support AAV DNA replication, we discovered that HeLa cell extracts grown to high density can occasionally display as much in vitro replication activity as Ad-infected extracts. This finding confirmed previous genetic analyses which suggested that no Ad-encoded proteins were absolutely essential for AAV DNA replication and that the uninfected extracts should be useful for studying the differences between helper-dependent and helper-independent AAV DNA replication. Using specific chemical inhibitors and monoclonal antibodies, as well as the fractionation of uninfected HeLa extracts, we identified several of the cellular enzymes involved in AAV DNA replication. They were the single-stranded DNA binding protein, replication protein A (RFA), the 3' primer binding complex, replication factor C (RFC), and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). Consistent with the current model for AAV DNA replication, which requires only leading-strand DNA synthesis, we found no requirement for DNA polymerase alpha-primase. AAV DNA replication could be reconstituted with purified Rep78, RPA, RFC, and PCNA and a phosphocellulose chromatography fraction (IIA) that contained DNA polymerase activity. As both RFC and PCNA are known to be accessory proteins for polymerase delta and epsilon, we attempted to reconstitute AAV DNA replication by substituting either purified polymerase delta or polymerase epsilon for fraction IIA. These attempts were unsuccessful and suggested that some novel cellular protein or modification was required for AAV DNA replication that had not been previously identified. Finally, we also further characterized the in vitro DNA replication assay and demonstrated by two-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis that all of the intermediates commonly seen in vivo are generated in the in vitro system. The only difference was an accumulation of single-stranded DNA in vivo that was not seen in vitro. The 2D data also suggested that although both Rep78 and Rep68 can generate dimeric intermediates in vitro, Rep68 is more efficient in processing dimers to monomer duplex DNA. Regardless of the Rep that was used in vitro, we found evidence of an interaction between the elongation complex and the terminal repeats. Nicking at the terminal repeats of a replicating molecule appeared to be inhibited until after elongation was complete.
Journal Article•10.1074/JBC.273.49.32421•
The Orc4p and Orc5p Subunits of the Xenopus and Human Origin Recognition Complex Are Related to Orc1p and Cdc6p

[...]

T. Tugal1, X. H. Zou-Yang2, K. Gavin2, Darryl J. Pappin3, Benito Cañas3, Ryuji Kobayashi2, Tim Hunt1, Bruce Stillman2 •
University of Cambridge1, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory2, Lincoln's Inn3
04 Dec 1998-Journal of Biological Chemistry
TL;DR: Comparison of the amino acid sequences of Orc1p, Orc4p, and Orc5p suggests that they are structurally related to each other and to the replication initiation protein, Cdc6p.
10.11501/3155058•
Sld2, which interacts with Dpb11 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, is required for chromosomal DNA replication

[...]

陽一郎 上村
30 Nov 1998
Journal Article•10.1128/JVI.72.10.8115-8123.1998•
Transactivation by the E2 Protein of Oncogenic Human Papillomavirus Type 31 Is Not Essential for Early and Late Viral Functions

[...]

Frank Stubenrauch1, Angela M. E. Colbert1, Laimonis A. Laimins1•
Northwestern University1
01 Oct 1998-Journal of Virology
TL;DR: It is concluded that the transactivation function of E2 is not essential for the viral life cycle of oncogenic HPVs, although it may act to moderately augment late expression and as a replication factor.
Abstract: The activation of transcription and of DNA replication are, in some cases, mediated by the same proteins. A prime example is the E2 protein of human papillomaviruses (HPVs), which binds ACCN6GGT sequences and activates heterologous promoters from multimerized binding sites. The E2 protein also has functions in replication, where it complexes with the virally encoded origin recognition protein, E1. Much of the information on these activities is based on transient-transfection assays as well as biochemical analyses; however, their importance in the productive life cycle of oncogenic HPVs remains unclear. To determine the contributions of these E2 functions to the HPV life cycle, a genetic analysis was performed by using an organotypic tissue culture model. HPV type 31 (HPV31) genomes that contained mutations in the N terminus of E2 (amino acid 73) were constructed; these mutants retained replication activities but were transactivation defective. Following transfection of normal human keratinocytes, these mutant genomes were established as stable episomes and expressed early viral transcripts at levels similar to those of wild-type HPV31. Upon differentiation in organotypic raft cultures, the induction of late gene expression and amplification of viral DNA were detected in cell lines harboring mutant genomes. Interestingly, only a modest reduction in late gene expression was observed in the mutant lines. We conclude that the transactivation function of E2 is not essential for the viral life cycle of oncogenic HPVs, although it may act to moderately augment late expression. Our studies suggest that the primary positive role of E2 in the viral life cycle is as a replication factor.
Journal Article•10.1098/RSTB.1998.0352•
Model scenarios for evolution of the eukaryotic cell cycle.

[...]

Bela Novak, Attila Csikász-Nagy, Bela Gyorffy, Kim Nasmyth, John J. Tyson1 •
Virginia Tech1
29 Dec 1998-Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors recast Nasmyth's idea in mathematical form and showed that the model exhibits hysteretic behaviour between alternative steady states: a Gl-like state (APC on, CDK activity low, DNA unreplicated and replication complexes assembled) and an S/M-like states (apC off, APC activity high, DNA replicated and replication complex disassembled).
Abstract: Progress through the division cycle of present day eukaryotic cells is controlled by a complex network consisting of (i) cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) and their associated cyclins, (ii) kinases and phosphatases that regulate CDK activity, and (iii) stoichiometric inhibitors that sequester cyclin-CDK dimers. Presumably regulation of cell division in the earliest ancestors of eukaryotes was a considerably simpler affair. Nasmyth (1995) recently proposed a mechanism for control of a putative, primordial, eukaryotic cell cycle, based on antagonistic interactions between a cyclin-CDK and the anaphase promoting complex (APC) that labels the cyclin subunit for proteolysis. We recast this idea in mathematical form and show that the model exhibits hysteretic behaviour between alternative steady states: a Gl-like state (APC on, CDK activity low, DNA unreplicated and replication complexes assembled) and an S/M-like state (APC off, CDK activity high, DNA replicated and replication complexes disassembled). In our model, the transition from G1 to S/M ('Start') is driven by cell growth, and the reverse transition ('Finish') is driven by completion of DNA synthesis and proper alignment of chromosomes on the metaphase plate. This simple and effective mechanism for coupling growth and division and for accurately copying and partitioning a genome consisting of numerous chromosomes, each with multiple origins of replication, could represent the core of the eukaryotic cell cycle. Furthermore, we show how other controls could be added to this core and speculate on the reasons why stoichiometric inhibitors and CDK inhibitory phosphorylation might have been appended to the primitive alternation between cyclin accumulation and degradation.
Journal Article•10.1093/EMBOJ/17.17.5095•
Transcription through a simple DNA repeat blocks replication elongation.

[...]

Maria M. Krasilnikova1, George M. Samadashwily2, Andrey S. Krasilnikov1, Sergei M. Mirkin2•
Russian Academy of Sciences1, University of Illinois at Chicago2
01 Sep 1998-The EMBO Journal
TL;DR: It is hypothesized that the replication fork halts after it encounters a stalled ternary complex of the RNA polymerase, the DNA template and the r(G)n transcript, which constitutes a novel mechanism for the regulation of replication elongation.
Abstract: The influence of d(G)n.d(C)n repeats on plasmid replication in Escherichia coli cells was analyzed using electrophoretic analysis of replication intermediates. These repeats impeded the replication fork in a length- and orientation-dependent manner. Unexpectedly, the replication arrest relied primarily on the repeats' transcription. When the d(C)n sequence served as the transcriptional template, both transcription and replication were blocked. This was true for transcription driven by either bacterial or phage RNA polymerases. We hypothesize that the replication fork halts after it encounters a stalled ternary complex of the RNA polymerase, the DNA template and the r(G)n transcript. This constitutes a novel mechanism for the regulation of replication elongation. The effects of this mechanism on repeat length polymorphism and genome rearrangements are discussed.
Journal Article•10.1091/MBC.9.1.63•
Negative regulation of Cdc18 DNA replication protein by Cdc2.

[...]

Antonia Lopez-Girona1, Odile Mondesert1, Janet Leatherwood1, Paul Russell1•
Scripps Research Institute1
01 Jan 1998-Molecular Biology of the Cell
TL;DR: Cdc18 is identified as a key target of Cdc2-Cdc13 and Cdc 2-Cig2 kinases in the mechanism that limits chromosomal DNA replication to once per cell cycle.
Abstract: Fission yeast Cdc18, a homologue of Cdc6 in budding yeast and metazoans, is periodically expressed during the S phase and required for activation of replication origins. Cdc18 overexpression induces DNA rereplication without mitosis, as does elimination of Cdc2-Cdc13 kinase during G2 phase. These findings suggest that illegitimate activation of origins may be prevented through inhibition of Cdc18 by Cdc2. Consistent with this hypothesis, we report that Cdc18 interacts with Cdc2 in association with Cdc13 and Cig2 B-type cyclins in vivo. Cdc18 is phosphorylated by the associated Cdc2 in vitro. Mutation of a single phosphorylation site, T104A, activates Cdc18 in the rereplication assay. The cdc18-K9 mutation is suppressed by a cig2 mutation, providing genetic evidence that Cdc2-Cig2 kinase inhibits Cdc18. Moreover, constitutive expression of Cig2 prevents rereplication in cells lacking Cdc13. These findings identify Cdc18 as a key target of Cdc2-Cdc13 and Cdc2-Cig2 kinases in the mechanism that limits chromosomal DNA replication to once per cell cycle.
Journal Article•10.1128/MCB.18.9.5485•
Functional and physical interaction between Rad24 and Rfc5 in the yeast checkpoint pathways.

[...]

Toshiyasu Shimomura1, Seiko Ando1, Kunihiro Matsumoto1, Katsunori Sugimoto1•
Nagoya University1
01 Sep 1998-Molecular and Cellular Biology
TL;DR: The isolation of RAD24 is described, known to play a role in the DNA damage checkpoint, as a dosage-dependent suppressor of rfc5-1, and a physical and functional interaction between Rad24 and Rfc5 in the checkpoint pathways is demonstrated.
Abstract: The RFC5 gene encodes a small subunit of replication factor C (RFC) complex in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and has been shown to be required for the checkpoints which respond to replication block and DNA damage. Here we describe the isolation of RAD24, known to play a role in the DNA damage checkpoint, as a dosage-dependent suppressor of rfc5-1. RAD24 overexpression suppresses the sensitivity of rfc5-1 cells to DNA-damaging agents and the defect in DNA damage-induced Rad53 phosphorylation. Rad24, like Rfc5, is required for the regulation of Rad53 phosphorylation in response to DNA damage. The Rad24 protein, which is structurally related to the RFC subunits, interacts physically with RFC subunits Rfc2 and Rfc5 and cosediments with Rfc5. Although the rad24Delta mutation alone does not cause a defect in the replication block checkpoint, it does enhance the defect in rfc5-1 mutants. Furthermore, overexpression of RAD24 suppresses the rfc5-1 defect in the replication block checkpoint. Taken together, our results demonstrate a physical and functional interaction between Rad24 and Rfc5 in the checkpoint pathways.
Journal Article•10.1093/EMBOJ/17.12.3428•
In vitro chromatin remodelling by chromatin accessibility complex (CHRAC) at the SV40 origin of DNA replication.

[...]

Vassilios Alexiadis1, Patrick Varga-Weisz, Edgar Bonte, Peter B. Becker, Claudia Gruss1 •
University of Konstanz1
15 Jun 1998-The EMBO Journal
TL;DR: Evidence is provided for the involvement of a nucleosome remodelling machine in structural changes at the SV40 origin of DNA replication in vitro and for the energy‐dependent cofactor responsible.
Abstract: DNA replication is initiated by binding of initiation factors to the origin of replication. Nucleosomes are known to inhibit the access of the replication machinery to origin sequences. Recently, nucleosome remodelling factors have been identified that increase the accessibility of nucleosomal DNA to transcription regulators. To test whether the initiation of DNA replication from an origin covered by nucleosomes would also benefit from the action of nucleosome remodelling factors, we reconstituted SV40 DNA into chromatin in Drosophila embryo extracts. In the presence of T-antigen and ATP, a chromatin-associated cofactor allowed efficient replication from a nucleosomal origin in vitro. In search of the energy-dependent cofactor responsible we found that purified 'chromatin accessibility complex' (CHRAC) was able to alter the nucleosomal structure at the origin allowing the binding of T-antigen and efficient initiation of replication. These experiments provide evidence for the involvement of a nucleosome remodelling machine in structural changes at the SV40 origin of DNA replication in vitro.
...

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