A Lesion in the DNA Replication Initiation Factor Mcm10 Induces Pausing of Elongation Forks through Chromosomal Replication Origins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

  • Merchant A
  • Kawasaki Y
  • Chen Y
  • et al.
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Abstract

We describe a new minichromosome maintenance factor, Mcm10, and show that this essential protein is involved in the initiation of DNA replication in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The mcm10 mutant has an autonomously replicating sequence-specific minichromosome maintenance defect and arrests at the nonpermissive temperature with dumbbell morphology and 2C DNA content. Mcm10 is a nuclear protein that physically interacts with several members of the MCM2-7 family of DNA replication initiation factors. Cloning and sequencing of the MCM10 gene show that it is identical to DNA43, a gene identified independently for its putative role in replicating DNA. Two-dimensional DNA gel analysis reveals that the mcm10-1 lesion causes a dramatic reduction in DNA replication initiation at chromosomal origins, including ORI1 and ORI121. Interestingly, the mcm10-1 lesion also causes replication forks to pause during elongation through these same loci. This novel phenotype suggests a unique role for the Mcm10 protein in the initiation of DNA synthesis at replication origins.

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APA

Merchant, A. M., Kawasaki, Y., Chen, Y., Lei, M., & Tye, B. K. (1997). A Lesion in the DNA Replication Initiation Factor Mcm10 Induces Pausing of Elongation Forks through Chromosomal Replication Origins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Molecular and Cellular Biology, 17(6), 3261–3271. https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.17.6.3261

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