Current Biology
Volume 21, Issue 13, 12 July 2011, Pages 1152-1157
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Regulation of DNA Replication through Sld3-Dpb11 Interaction Is Conserved from Yeast to Humans

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Summary

Cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) play crucial roles in promoting DNA replication and preventing rereplication in eukaryotic cells [1, 2, 3, 4]. In budding yeast, CDKs promote DNA replication by phosphorylating two proteins, Sld2 and Sld3, which generates binding sites for pairs of BRCT repeats (breast cancer gene 1 [BRCA1] C terminal repeats) in the Dpb11 protein [5, 6]. The Sld3-Dpb11-Sld2 complex generated by CDK phosphorylation is required for the assembly and activation of the Cdc45-Mcm2-7-GINS (CMG) replicative helicase. In response to DNA replication stress, the interaction between Sld3 and Dpb11 is blocked by the checkpoint kinase Rad53 [7], which prevents late origin firing [7, 8]. Here we show that the two key CDK sites in Sld3 are conserved in the human Sld3-related protein Treslin/ticrr and are essential for DNA replication. Moreover, phosphorylation of these two sites mediates interaction with the orthologous pair of BRCT repeats in the human Dpb11 ortholog, TopBP1. Finally, we show that DNA replication stress prevents the interaction between Treslin/ticrr and TopBP1 via the Chk1 checkpoint kinase. Our results indicate that Treslin/ticrr is a genuine ortholog of Sld3 and that the Sld3-Dpb11 interaction has remained a critical nexus of S phase regulation through eukaryotic evolution.

Highlights

► Two CDK sites in human Treslin/ticrr (Sld3) are required for DNA replication ► Their phosphorylation promotes binding to essential BRCT repeats in TopBP1 (Dpb11) ► The checkpoint kinase Chk1 disrupts this interaction after replication stress ► Treslin/ticrr-TopBP1 interaction regulates DNA replication from yeast to humans

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