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Molecular Basis of the Essential S Phase Function of the Rad53 Checkpoint Kinase
Author(s) -
Nícolas C. Hoch,
Eric S.-W. Chen,
Robert Buckland,
ShunChung Wang,
Alessandro Fazio,
Andrew Hammet,
Achille Pellicioli,
Andrei Chabes,
MingDaw Tsai,
Jörg Heierhorst
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.00474-13
Subject(s) - biology , g2 m dna damage checkpoint , microbiology and biotechnology , checkpoint kinase 2 , dna replication , chek1 , kinase , dna damage , dna pkcs , mutation , mutant , protein kinase a , dna , genetics , cell cycle checkpoint , protein serine threonine kinases , cell cycle , gene
The essential yeast kinases Mec1 and Rad53, or human ATR and Chk1, are crucial for checkpoint responses to exogenous genotoxic agents, but why they are also required for DNA replication in unperturbed cells remains poorly understood. Here we report that even in the absence of DNA-damaging agents, therad53-4AQ mutant, lacking the N-terminal Mec1 phosphorylation site cluster, is synthetic lethal with a deletion of theRAD9 DNA damage checkpoint adaptor. This phenotype is caused by an inability ofrad53-4AQ to activate the downstream kinase Dun1, which then leads to reduced basal deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) levels, spontaneous replication fork stalling, and constitutive activation of and dependence on S phase DNA damage checkpoints. Surprisingly, the kinase-deficientrad53-K227A mutant does not share these phenotypes but is rendered inviable by additional phosphosite mutations that prevent its binding to Dun1. The results demonstrate that ultralow Rad53 catalytic activity is sufficient for normal replication of undamaged chromosomes as long as it is targeted toward activation of the effector kinase Dun1. Our findings indicate that the essential S phase function of Rad53 is comprised by the combination of its role in regulating basal dNTP levels and its compensatory kinase function if dNTP levels are perturbed.

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