GENETIC ANALYSIS OF CHROMOSOME SEGREGATION IN YEAST
Project Number2R01GM036510-10
Contact PI/Project LeaderHOLM, CONNIE A
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO
Description
Abstract Text
Our ultimate goal is to understand the molecular mechanisms of chromosome
segregation. Specifically, we want to understand how chromosomes are
replicated precisely, how their structural integrity is maintained, and
how their separation is coordinated with other events in the cell cycle.
To probe these issues, we will study mutations in two genes that encode
biochemically well-characterized proteins that may play essential roles in
both the mechanics of DNA replication and its coordination with mitosis.
CDC44 (the large subunit of replication factor C) and PCNA (proliferating
cell nuclear antigen) have been shown to interact both biochemically and
genetically, and each has characteristics that suggest a dual role in the
cell cycle. Thorough biochemical analysis reveals that replication factor
C and PCNA act together to promote the processivity of DNA polymerase
delta in vitro. Nonetheless, cell-cycle analysis of a cdc44 mutant
suggests that a critical mitotic (post-replicative) function is perturbed.
Correspondingly, the association of PCNA with most cyclin-dependent-kinase
complexes in vivo suggests that PCNA may play an important role in the
coordination of DNA synthesis with other cellular events.
To analyze the roles of CDC44 and PCNA in living cells we will create
random and site-directed mutations in vitro and analyze the phenotypes
they confer. Perturbations of DNA replication will be signaled by elevated
mutation rates, disrupted DNA synthesis, and an appropriate cell-cycle
arrest. Perturbations of mitotic functions will be revealed by a post-
replicative arrest or phenotypes characteristic of a regulatory defect.
Because CDC44 and PCNA appear to be components of a large intracellular
complex, complete understanding of their roles in the cell will require an
understanding of the components with which they interact. Thus,
pseudoreversion and unlinked non-complementation will be used to identify
functional interactions that take place in vivo. Mutagenesis and
phenotypic analysis will then be used to examine the roles of the newly
identified gene products in the vital processes of the cell cycle.
A related project will examine the effect on telomere metabolism of
perturbing DNA replication. The allele-specific elongation of telomeres in
cdc44 and cdcl7 (DNA polymerase delta) mutants suggests that specific
perturbations of DNA replication can unbalance the processes that maintain
telomeres. To determine the characteristics that lead to this imbalance,
telomere elongation will be assessed in cdc44 and cdcl7 mutants with
different phenotypes, and the effects of cell-cycle delays will be
examined.
Taken together, our studies of CDC44 and PCNA will lead to an improved
understanding of DNA replication and the cell cycle, and ultimately of
genetic diseases such as cancer.
No Sub Projects information available for 2R01GM036510-10
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