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CDC6 interaction with ATR regulates activation of a replication checkpoint in higher eukaryotic cells.

Authors :
Yoshida K
Sugimoto N
Iwahori S
Yugawa T
Narisawa-Saito M
Kiyono T
Fujita M
Source :
Journal of cell science [J Cell Sci] 2010 Jan 15; Vol. 123 (Pt 2), pp. 225-35.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

CDC6, a replication licensing protein, is partially exported to the cytoplasm in human cells through phosphorylation by Cdk during S phase, but a significant proportion remains in the nucleus. We report here that human CDC6 physically interacts with ATR, a crucial checkpoint kinase, in a manner that is stimulated by phosphorylation by Cdk. CDC6 silencing by siRNAs affected ATR-dependent inhibition of mitotic entry elicited by modest replication stress. Whereas a Cdk-phosphorylation-mimicking CDC6 mutant could rescue the checkpoint defect by CDC6 silencing, a phosphorylation-deficient mutant could not. Furthermore, we found that the CDC6-ATR interaction is conserved in Xenopus. We show that the presence of Xenopus CDC6 during S phase is essential for Xenopus ATR to bind to chromatin in response to replication inhibition. In addition, when human CDC6 amino acid fragment 180-220, which can bind to both human and Xenopus ATR, was added to Xenopus egg extracts after assembly of the pre-replication complex, Xenopus Chk1 phosphorylation was significantly reduced without lowering replication, probably through a sequestration of CDC6-mediated ATR-chromatin interaction. Thus, CDC6 might regulate replication-checkpoint activation through the interaction with ATR in higher eukaryotic cells.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1477-9137
Volume :
123
Issue :
Pt 2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of cell science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
20048340
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.058693