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Essential global role of CDC14 in DNA synthesis revealed by chromosome underreplication unrecognized by checkpoints in cdc14 mutants

Dulev, S.; de Renty, C.; Mehta, R.; Minkov, I.; Schwob, E.; Strunnikov, A.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

2009-08-25 / vol 106 / pages 14466-71

Abstract

The CDC14 family of multifunctional evolutionarily conserved phosphatases includes major regulators of mitosis in eukaryotes and of DNA damage response in humans. The CDC14 function is also crucial for accurate chromosome segregation, which is exemplified by its absolute requirement in yeast for the anaphase segregation of nucleolar organizers; however the nature of this essential pathway is not understood. Upon investigation of the rDNA nondisjunction phenomenon, it was found that cdc14 mutants fail to complete replication of this locus. Moreover, other late-replicating genomic regions (10% of the genome) are also underreplicated in cdc14 mutants undergoing anaphase. This selective genome-wide replication defect is due to dosage insufficiency of replication factors in the nucleus, which stems from two defects, both contingent on the reduced CDC14 function in the preceding mitosis. First, a constitutive nuclear import defect results in a drastic dosage decrease for those replication proteins that are regulated by nuclear transport. Particularly, essential RPA subunits display both lower mRNA and protein levels, as well as abnormal cytoplasmic localization. Second, the reduced transcription of MBF and SBF-controlled genes in G1 leads to the reduction in protein levels of many proteins involved in DNA replication. The failure to complete replication of late replicons is the primary reason for chromosome nondisjunction upon CDC14 dysfunction. As the genome-wide slow-down of DNA replication does not trigger checkpoints [Lengronne A, Schwob E (2002) Mol Cell 9:1067-1078], CDC14 mutations pose an overwhelming challenge to genome stability, both generating chromosome damage and undermining the checkpoint control mechanisms.

Lire sur PubMed

0900190106 [pii] 10.1073/pnas.0900190106

1091-6490 (Electronic) 0027-8424 (Linking)

IGMM team(s) involved in this publication
Étiquettes

Chromatin Immunoprecipitation; Genome-Wide Association Study; Models, Biological; Protein Binding; Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics/metabolism; Cell Nucleus/metabolism; Blotting, Western; Chromosome Segregation; DNA Damage; Transcription, Genetic; Genome, Fungal/genetics; DNA Replication; Active Transport, Cell Nucleus; *Mutation; Anaphase/genetics; Cell Cycle Proteins/*genetics/metabolism; Chromosomes, Fungal/*genetics; DNA, Fungal/*biosynthesis/genetics; DNA, Ribosomal/genetics; G1 Phase/genetics; Genes, Essential/genetics/physiology; Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases/*genetics/metabolism; Replication Protein A/genetics/metabolism; S Phase/genetics; Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/*genetics/metabolism

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