We previously identified and purified from human (HeLa) cells a 66-kDa cruciform-binding protein, CBP, with binding specificity for cruciform DNA regardless of its sequence. DNA cruciforms have been implicated in the regulation of initiation of DNA replication. CBP is a member of the 14-3-3 family of proteins, which are conserved regulatory molecules expressed in all eukaryotes. Here, the in vivo association of CBP/14-3-3 with mammalian origins of DNA replication was analyzed by studying its association with the monkey replication origins ors8 and ors12, as assayed by a chromatin immunoprecipitation assay and quantitative PCR analysis. The association of the 14-3-3β, -ε, -γ, and -ζ isoforms with these origins was found to be ∼9-fold higher, compared with other portions of the genome, in logarithmically growing cells. In addition, the association of these isoforms with ors8 and ors12 was also analyzed as a function of the cell cycle. Higher binding of 14-3-β, -ε, -γ, and -ζ isoforms with ors8 and ors12 was found at the G1/S border, by comparison with other stages of the cell cycle. The CBP/14-3-3 cruciform binding activity was also found to be maximal at the G1/S boundary. The involvement of 14-3-3 in mammalian DNA replication was analyzed by studying the effect of anti-14-3-β, -ε, -γ, and -ζ antibodies in the in vitro replication of p186, a plasmid containing the minimal replication origin of ors8. Anti-14-3-3ε, -γ, and -ζ antibodies alone or in combination inhibited p186 replication by ∼50-80%, while anti-14-3-3β antibodies had a lesser effect (∼25-50%). All of the antibodies tested were also able to interfere with CBP binding to cruciform DNA. The results indicate that CBP/14-3-3 is an origin-binding protein, acting at the initiation step of DNA replication by binding to cruciform-containing molecules, and dissociates after origin firing.
CITATION STYLE
Novac, O., Alvarez, D., Pearson, C. E., Price, G. B., & Zannis-Hadjopoulos, M. (2002). The human cruciform-binding protein, CBP, is involved in DNA replication and associates in vivo with mammalian replication origins. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 277(13), 11174–11183. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M107902200
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