scholarly journals Protein Phosphatase 2A and Cdc7 Kinase Regulate the DNA Unwinding Element-binding Protein in Replication Initiation

2014 ◽  
Vol 289 (52) ◽  
pp. 35987-36000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanzhe Gao ◽  
Jianhong Yao ◽  
Sumeet Poudel ◽  
Eric Romer ◽  
Lubna Abu-Niaaj ◽  
...  
2010 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 1495-1507 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Chowdhury ◽  
G. Liu ◽  
M. Kemp ◽  
X. Chen ◽  
N. Katrangi ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Template unwinding during DNA replication initiation requires the loading of the MCM helicase activator Cdc45 at replication origins. We show that Cdc45 interacts with the DNA unwinding element (DUE) binding protein DUE-B and that these proteins localize to the DUEs of active replication origins. DUE-B and Cdc45 are not bound at the inactive c-myc replicator in the absence of a functional DUE or at the recently identified ataxin 10 (ATX10) origin, which is silent before disease-related (ATTCT) n repeat length expansion of its DUE sequence, despite the presence of the origin recognition complex (ORC) and MCM proteins at these origins. Addition of a heterologous DUE to the ectopic c-myc origin, or expansion of the ATX10 DUE, leads to origin activation, DUE-B binding, and Cdc45 binding. DUE-B, Cdc45, and topoisomerase IIβ binding protein 1 (TopBP1) form complexes in cell extracts and when expressed from baculovirus vectors. During replication in Xenopus egg extracts, DUE-B and Cdc45 bind to chromatin with similar kinetics, and DUE-B immunodepletion blocks replication and the loading of Cdc45 and a fraction of TopBP1. The coordinated binding of DUE-B and Cdc45 to origins and the physical interactions of DUE-B, Cdc45, and TopBP1 suggest that complexes of these proteins are necessary for replication initiation.


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