Alleles of the yeast Pms1 mismatch-repair gene that differentially affect recombination- and replication-related processes.
Journal Article (Journal Article)
Mismatch-repair (MMR) systems promote eukaryotic genome stability by removing errors introduced during DNA replication and by inhibiting recombination between nonidentical sequences (spellchecker and antirecombination activities, respectively). Following a common mismatch-recognition step effected by MutS-homologous Msh proteins, homologs of the bacterial MutL ATPase (predominantly the Mlh1p-Pms1p heterodimer in yeast) couple mismatch recognition to the appropriate downstream processing steps. To examine whether the processing steps in the spellchecker and antirecombination pathways might differ, we mutagenized the yeast PMS1 gene and screened for mitotic separation-of-function alleles. Two alleles affecting only the antirecombination function of Pms1p were identified, one of which changed an amino acid within the highly conserved ATPase domain. To more specifically address the role of ATP binding/hydrolysis in MMR-related processes, we examined mutations known to compromise the ATPase activity of Pms1p or Mlh1p with respect to the mitotic spellchecker and antirecombination activities and with respect to the repair of mismatches present in meiotic recombination intermediates. The results of these analyses confirm a differential requirement for the Pms1p ATPase activity in replication vs. recombination processes, while demonstrating that the Mlh1p ATPase activity is important for all examined MMR-related functions.
Full Text
Duke Authors
Cited Authors
- Welz-Voegele, C; Stone, JE; Tran, PT; Kearney, HM; Liskay, RM; Petes, TD; Jinks-Robertson, S
Published Date
- November 2002
Published In
Volume / Issue
- 162 / 3
Start / End Page
- 1131 - 1145
PubMed ID
- 12454061
Pubmed Central ID
- PMC1462331
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 0016-6731
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- 10.1093/genetics/162.3.1131
Language
- eng
Conference Location
- United States