Cdc7 is required throughout the yeast S phasetoactivatereplication origins

  1. Anne D. Donaldson,
  2. Walton L. Fangman, and
  3. Bonita J. Brewer
  1. Department of Genetics, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195-7360 USA

Abstract

The long-standing conclusion that the Cdc7 kinase ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae is required only to trigger S phase has been challenged by recent data that suggests it acts directly on individual replication origins. We tested the possibility that early- and late-activated origins have different requirements for Cdc7 activity. Cells carrying a cdc7ts allele were first arrested in G1 at the cdc7 block by incubation at 37°C, and then were allowed to enter S phase by brief incubation at 23°C. During the S phase, after return to 37°C, early-firing replication origins were activated, but late origins failed to fire. Similarly, a plasmid with a late-activated origin was defective in replication. As a consequence of the origin activation defect, duplication of chromosomal sequences that are normally replicated from late origins was greatly delayed. Early-replicating regions of the genome duplicated at approximately their normal time. The requirements of early and late origins for Cdc7 appear to be temporally rather than quantitatively different, as reducing overall levels of Cdc7 by growth at semi-permissive temperature reduced activation at early and late origins approximately equally. Our results show that Cdc7 activates early and late origins separately, with late origins requiring the activity later in S phase to permit replication initiation.

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Footnotes

  • Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL bbrewer{at}genetics.washington.edu; FAX (206) 543-0754.

    • Received September 26, 1997.
    • Accepted December 17, 1997.
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