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12
result(s) for
"Lisette Marjavaara"
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Acute Smc5/6 depletion reveals its primary role in rDNA replication by restraining recombination at fork pausing sites
by
Peng, Xiao P.
,
Li, Shibai
,
Marjavaara, Lisette
in
Adenosine triphosphatase
,
ATPases
,
Biochemistry
2018
Smc5/6, a member of the conserved SMC family of complexes, is essential for growth in most organisms. Its exact functions in a mitotic cell cycle are controversial, as chronic Smc5/6 loss-of-function alleles produce varying phenotypes. To circumvent this issue, we acutely depleted Smc5/6 in budding yeast and determined the first cell cycle consequences of Smc5/6 removal. We found a striking primary defect in replication of the ribosomal DNA (rDNA) array. Each rDNA repeat contains a programmed replication fork barrier (RFB) established by the Fob1 protein. Fob1 removal improves rDNA replication in Smc5/6 depleted cells, implicating Smc5/6 in the management of programmed fork pausing. A similar improvement is achieved by removing the DNA helicase Mph1 whose recombinogenic activity can be inhibited by Smc5/6 under DNA damage conditions. DNA 2D gel analyses further show that Smc5/6 loss increases recombination structures at RFB regions; moreover, mph1∆ and fob1∆ similarly reduce this accumulation. These findings point to an important mitotic role for Smc5/6 in restraining recombination events when protein barriers in rDNA stall replication forks. As rDNA maintenance influences multiple essential cellular processes, Smc5/6 likely links rDNA stability to overall mitotic growth.
Journal Article
Rnr1, but not Rnr3, facilitates the sustained telomerase-dependent elongation of telomeres
by
Marjavaara, Lisette
,
Grinberg, Gilad
,
Sharma, Sushma
in
Baking yeast
,
Biochemistry
,
Biology and Life Sciences
2017
Ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) provides the precursors for the generation of dNTPs, which are required for DNA synthesis and repair. Here, we investigated the function of the major RNR subunits Rnr1 and Rnr3 in telomere elongation in budding yeast. We show that Rnr1 is essential for the sustained elongation of short telomeres by telomerase. In the absence of Rnr1, cells harbor very short, but functional, telomeres, which cannot become elongated by increased telomerase activity or by tethering of telomerase to telomeres. Furthermore, we demonstrate that Rnr1 function is critical to prevent an early onset of replicative senescence and premature survivor formation in telomerase-negative cells but dispensable for telomere elongation by Homology-Directed-Repair. Our results suggest that telomerase has a \"basal activity\" mode that is sufficient to compensate for the \"end-replication-problem\" and does not require the presence of Rnr1 and a different \"sustained activity\" mode necessary for the elongation of short telomeres, which requires an upregulation of dNTP levels and dGTP ratios specifically through Rnr1 function. By analyzing telomere length and dNTP levels in different mutants showing changes in RNR complex composition and activity we provide evidence that the Mec1ATR checkpoint protein promotes telomere elongation by increasing both dNTP levels and dGTP ratios through Rnr1 upregulation in a mechanism that cannot be replaced by its homolog Rnr3.
Journal Article
Endogenous DNA replication stress results in expansion of dNTP pools and a mutator phenotype
by
Myers, Chad L
,
Ou, Jiongwen
,
Davidson, Marta B
in
Cell cycle
,
Deoxyribonucleic acid
,
deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates
2012
The integrity of the genome depends on diverse pathways that regulate DNA metabolism. Defects in these pathways result in genome instability, a hallmark of cancer. Deletion of
ELG1
in budding yeast, when combined with hypomorphic alleles of
PCNA
results in spontaneous DNA damage during S phase that elicits upregulation of ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) activity. Increased RNR activity leads to a dramatic expansion of deoxyribonucleotide (dNTP) pools in G1 that allows cells to synthesize significant fractions of the genome in the presence of hydroxyurea in the subsequent S phase. Consistent with the recognized correlation between dNTP levels and spontaneous mutation, compromising
ELG1
and
PCNA
results in a significant increase in mutation rates. Deletion of distinct genome stability genes
RAD54
,
RAD55
, and
TSA1
also results in increased dNTP levels and mutagenesis, suggesting that this is a general phenomenon. Together, our data point to a vicious circle in which mutations in gatekeeper genes give rise to genomic instability during S phase, inducing expansion of the dNTP pool, which in turn results in high levels of spontaneous mutagenesis.
Mild DNA damage checkpoint activation in yeast is sufficient to cause increased nucleotide pools and subsequent mutagenesis, revealing basal levels of replication stress as potential source of genomic instability.
Journal Article
H2B Mono-ubiquitylation Facilitates Fork Stalling and Recovery during Replication Stress by Coordinating Rad53 Activation and Chromatin Assembly
by
Hung, Shih-Hsun
,
Gay, Sophie
,
Devys, Didier
in
Biochemistry, Molecular Biology
,
Biology and life sciences
,
Cell Cycle Proteins - genetics
2014
The influence of mono-ubiquitylation of histone H2B (H2Bub) on transcription via nucleosome reassembly has been widely documented. Recently, it has also been shown that H2Bub promotes recovery from replication stress; however, the underling molecular mechanism remains unclear. Here, we show that H2B ubiquitylation coordinates activation of the intra-S replication checkpoint and chromatin re-assembly, in order to limit fork progression and DNA damage in the presence of replication stress. In particular, we show that the absence of H2Bub affects replication dynamics (enhanced fork progression and reduced origin firing), leading to γH2A accumulation and increased hydroxyurea sensitivity. Further genetic analysis indicates a role for H2Bub in transducing Rad53 phosphorylation. Concomitantly, we found that a change in replication dynamics is not due to a change in dNTP level, but is mediated by reduced Rad53 activation and destabilization of the RecQ helicase Sgs1 at the fork. Furthermore, we demonstrate that H2Bub facilitates the dissociation of the histone chaperone Asf1 from Rad53, and nucleosome reassembly behind the fork is compromised in cells lacking H2Bub. Taken together, these results indicate that the regulation of H2B ubiquitylation is a key event in the maintenance of genome stability, through coordination of intra-S checkpoint activation, chromatin assembly and replication fork progression.
Journal Article
Heterozygous colon cancer-associated mutations of SAMHD1 have functional significance
by
Watt, Danielle L.
,
Marjavaara, Lisette
,
Lindell, Kristoffer
in
Animals
,
Biochemistry
,
Biological Sciences
2016
Even small variations in dNTP concentrations decrease DNA replication fidelity, and this observation prompted us to analyze genomic cancer data formutations in enzymes involved in dNTP metabolism. We found that sterile alpha motif and histidine-aspartate domain-containing protein 1 (SAMHD1), a deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate triphosphohydrolase that decreases dNTP pools, is frequently mutated in colon cancers, that these mutations negatively affect SAMHD1 activity, and that several SAMHD1 mutations are found in tumors with defective mismatch repair. We show that minor changes in dNTP pools in combination with inactivated mismatch repair dramatically increase mutation rates. Determination of dNTP pools in mouse embryos revealed that inactivation of one SAMHD1 allele is sufficient to elevate dNTP pools. These observations suggest that heterozygous cancer-associated SAMHD1 mutations increase mutation rates in cancer cells.
Journal Article
Telomere Length Homeostasis Responds to Changes in Intracellular dNTP Pools
by
Marjavaara, Lisette
,
Lingner, Joachim
,
Sharma, Sushma
in
Chromosomes
,
Deoxyribonucleic acid
,
dNTPs
2013
Telomeres, the ends of linear eukaryotic chromosomes, shorten due to incomplete DNA replication and nucleolytic degradation. Cells counteract this shortening by employing a specialized reverse transcriptase called telomerase, which uses deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs) to extend telomeres. Intracellular dNTP levels are tightly regulated, and perturbation of these levels is known to affect DNA synthesis. We examined whether altering the levels of the dNTP pools or changing the relative ratios of the four dNTPs in Saccharomyces cerevisiae would affect the length of the telomeres. Lowering dNTP levels leads to a modest shortening of telomeres, while increasing dNTP pools has no significant effect on telomere length. Strikingly, altering the ratio of the four dNTPs dramatically affects telomere length homeostasis, both positively and negatively. Specifically, we find that intracellular deoxyguanosine triphosphate (dGTP) levels positively correlate with both telomere length and telomerase nucleotide addition processivity in vivo. Our findings are consistent with in vitro data showing dGTP-dependent stimulation of telomerase activity in multiple organisms and suggest that telomerase activity is modulated in vivo by dGTP levels.
Journal Article
dNTP pool levels modulate mutator phenotypes of error-prone DNA polymerase ε variants
by
Marjavaara, Lisette
,
Herr, Alan J.
,
Schultz, Eric M.
in
Alleles
,
Antineoplastic Agents - chemistry
,
Antineoplastic Agents - therapeutic use
2015
Significance An increased rate of mutation, or “mutator phenotype,” generates genetic diversity that can accelerate cancer progression or confer resistance to chemotherapy drugs. New therapeutic strategies are needed that target mutator phenotypes directly. Mutator phenotypes due to defects in DNA polymerase ε have been implicated in colorectal and endometrial cancers and may emerge in other cancers during treatment. Here, we show in budding yeast that such mutator phenotypes are influenced by the levels of dNTPs, the building blocks of DNA. Lowering dNTP pool levels lessens the mutator phenotypes, whereas increasing dNTP pools accentuates the mutator phenotypes. These findings suggest that mutator phenotypes due to error-prone polymerases may be modulated by treatments that target dNTP pools.
Mutator phenotypes create genetic diversity that fuels tumor evolution. DNA polymerase (Pol) ε mediates leading strand DNA replication. Proofreading defects in this enzyme drive a number of human malignancies. Here, using budding yeast, we show that mutator variants of Pol ε depend on damage uninducible (Dun)1, an S-phase checkpoint kinase that maintains dNTP levels during a normal cell cycle and up-regulates dNTP synthesis upon checkpoint activation. Deletion of DUN1 ( dun1 Δ) suppresses the mutator phenotype of pol2-4 (encoding Pol ε proofreading deficiency) and is synthetically lethal with pol2-M644G (encoding altered Pol ε base selectivity). Although pol2-4 cells cycle normally, pol2-M644G cells progress slowly through S-phase. The pol2-M644G cells tolerate deletions of mediator of the replication checkpoint ( MRC ) 1 ( mrc1 Δ) and radiation sensitive ( Rad ) 9 ( rad9 Δ), which encode mediators of checkpoint responses to replication stress and DNA damage, respectively. The pol2-M644G mutator phenotype is partially suppressed by mrc1 Δ but not rad9 Δ; neither deletion suppresses the pol2-4 mutator phenotype. Thus, checkpoint activation augments the Dun1 effect on replication fidelity but is not required for it. Deletions of genes encoding key Dun1 targets that negatively regulate dNTP synthesis, suppress the dun1 Δ pol2-M644G synthetic lethality and restore the mutator phenotype of pol2-4 in dun1 Δ cells. DUN1 pol2-M644G cells have constitutively high dNTP levels, consistent with checkpoint activation. In contrast, pol2-4 and POL2 cells have similar dNTP levels, which decline in the absence of Dun1 and rise in the absence of the negative regulators of dNTP synthesis. Thus, dNTP pool levels correlate with Pol ε mutator severity, suggesting that treatments targeting dNTP pools could modulate mutator phenotypes for therapy.
Journal Article
Evidence that processing of ribonucleotides in DNA by topoisomerase 1 is leading-strand specific
by
Lujan, Scott A
,
Marjavaara, Lisette
,
Williams, Jessica S
in
45/23
,
631/337/1427/2123
,
631/337/151/1431
2015
In the absence of RNase H2, ribonucleotides incorporated during DNA replication can be processed by Top1. This activity is directed to the nascent leading strand, because gaps in the lagging strand would limit torsional tension.
Ribonucleotides incorporated during DNA replication are removed by RNase H2–dependent ribonucleotide excision repair (RER). In RER-defective yeast, topoisomerase 1 (Top1) incises DNA at unrepaired ribonucleotides, initiating their removal, but this is accompanied by RNA-DNA–damage phenotypes. Here we show that these phenotypes are incurred by a high level of ribonucleotides incorporated by a leading strand–replicase variant, DNA polymerase (Pol) ɛ, but not by orthologous variants of the lagging-strand replicases, Pols α or δ. Moreover, loss of both RNases H1 and H2 is lethal in combination with increased ribonucleotide incorporation by Pol ɛ but not by Pols α or δ. Several explanations for this asymmetry are considered, including the idea that Top1 incision at ribonucleotides relieves torsional stress in the nascent leading strand but not in the nascent lagging strand, in which preexisting nicks prevent the accumulation of superhelical tension.
Journal Article
dNTP pool levels modulate mutator phenotypes of error-prone DNA polymerase epsilon variants
by
Williams, Lindsey N
,
Marjavaara, Lisette
,
Fox, Edward J
in
Cells
,
Deoxyribonucleic acid
,
DNA polymerase
2015
Mutator phenotypes create genetic diversity that fuels tumor evolution. DNA polymerase (Pol) ... mediates leading strand DNA replication. Proofreading defects in this enzyme drive a number of human malignancies. Here, using budding yeast, we show that mutator variants of Pol ... depend on damage uninducible (Dun)1, an S-phase checkpoint kinase that maintains dNTP levels during a normal cell cycle and up-regulates dNTP synthesis upon checkpoint activation. Deletion of DUN1 (dun1...) suppresses the mutator phenotype of pol2-4 (encoding Pol ... proofreading deficiency) and is synthetically lethal with pol2-M644G (encoding altered Pol ... base selectivity). Although pol2-4 cells cycle normally, pol2-M644G cells progress slowly through S-phase. The pol2-M644G cells tolerate deletions of mediator of the replication checkpoint (MRC) 1 (mrc1...) and radiation sensitive (Rad) 9 (rad9...), which encode mediators of checkpoint responses to replication stress and DNA damage, respectively. The pol2-M644G mutator phenotype is partially suppressed by mrc1... but not rad9...; neither deletion suppresses the pol2-4 mutator phenotype. Thus, checkpoint activation augments the Dun1 effect on replication fidelity but is not required for it. Deletions of genes encoding key Dun1 targets that negatively regulate dNTP synthesis, suppress the dun1... pol2-M644G synthetic lethality and restore the mutator phenotype of pol2-4 in dun1... cells. DUN1 pol2-M644G cells have constitutively high dNTP levels, consistent with checkpoint activation. In contrast, pol2-4 and POL2 cells have similar dNTP levels, which decline in the absence of Dun1 and rise in the absence of the negative regulators of dNTP synthesis. Thus, dNTP pool levels correlate with Pol ... mutator severity, suggesting that treatments targeting dNTP pools could modulate mutator phenotypes for therapy. (ProQuest: ... denotes formulae/symbols omitted.)
Journal Article
H2B Mono-ubiquitylation Facilitates Fork Stalling and Recovery during Replication Stress by Coordinating Rad53 Activation and Chromatin Assembly
2014
The influence of mono-ubiquitylation of histone H2B (H2Bub) on transcription via nucleosome reassembly has been widely documented. Recently, it has also been shown that H2Bub promotes recovery from replication stress; however, the underling molecular mechanism remains unclear. Here, we show that H2B ubiquitylation coordinates activation of the intra-S replication checkpoint and chromatin re-assembly, in order to limit fork progression and DNA damage in the presence of replication stress. In particular, we show that the absence of H2Bub affects replication dynamics (enhanced fork progression and reduced origin firing), leading to γH2A accumulation and increased hydroxyurea sensitivity. Further genetic analysis indicates a role for H2Bub in transducing Rad53 phosphorylation. Concomitantly, we found that a change in replication dynamics is not due to a change in dNTP level, but is mediated by reduced Rad53 activation and destabilization of the RecQ helicase Sgs1 at the fork. Furthermore, we demonstrate that H2Bub facilitates the dissociation of the histone chaperone Asf1 from Rad53, and nucleosome reassembly behind the fork is compromised in cells lacking H2Bub. Taken together, these results indicate that the regulation of H2B ubiquitylation is a key event in the maintenance of genome stability, through coordination of intra-S checkpoint activation, chromatin assembly and replication fork progression.
Journal Article