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Vol. 11, Issue 5, 1673-1685, May 2000
Division of Hematology/Oncology, Children's Hospital Los Angeles,
University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles,
California 90027
Recent studies have shown that Cdc6 is an essential regulator in
the formation of DNA replication complexes. However, the biochemical
nature of the Cdc6 molecule is still largely unknown. In this report,
we present evidence that the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Cdc6 protein is a double-stranded DNA-binding protein. First, we have
demonstrated that the purified yeast Cdc6 can bind to double-stranded
DNA (dissociation constant ~ 1 × 10
7 M), not to single-stranded DNA, and that the Cdc6
molecule is a homodimer in its native form. Second, we show that
GST-Cdc6 fusion proteins expressed in Escherichia
coli bind DNA in an electrophoretic mobility shift
assay. Cdc6 antibodies and GST antibodies, but not preimmune serum,
induce supershifts of GST-Cdc6 and DNA complexes in these assays, which
also showed that GST-Cdc6 binds to various DNA probes without apparent
sequence specificity. Third, the minimal requirement for the binding of
Cdc6 to DNA has been mapped within its N-terminal 47-amino acid
sequence (the NP6 region). This minimal binding domain shows identical
DNA-binding properties to those possessed by full-length Cdc6. Fourth,
the GST-NP6 protein competes for DNA binding with distamycin A, an
antibiotic that chelates DNA within the minor groove of the A+T-rich
region. Finally, site-direct mutagenesis studies revealed that the
29KRKK region of Cdc6 is essential for Cdc6 DNA-binding
activity. To further elucidate the function of Cdc6 DNA binding in
vivo, we demonstrated that a binding mutant of Cdc6 fails to complement either cdc6-1 temperature-sensitive mutant cells or
cdc6 null mutant cells at the nonpermissive
temperature. The mutant gene also conferred growth impairments and
increased the plasmid loss in its host, indicative of defects in DNA
synthesis. Because the mutant defective in DNA binding also fails to
stimulate Abf1 ARS1 DNA-binding activity, our results
suggest that Cdc6 DNA-binding activity may play a pivotal role in the
initiation of DNA replication.
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