Genes & Development 2010-01-15

A vertebrate gene, ticrr, is an essential checkpoint and replication regulator.

Christopher L Sansam, Nelly M Cruz, Paul S Danielian, Adam Amsterdam, Melissa L Lau, Nancy Hopkins, Jacqueline A Lees

Index: Genes Dev. 24 , 183-94, (2010)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Eukaryotes have numerous checkpoint pathways to protect genome fidelity during normal cell division and in response to DNA damage. Through a screen for G2/M checkpoint regulators in zebrafish, we identified ticrr (for TopBP1-interacting, checkpoint, and replication regulator), a previously uncharacterized gene that is required to prevent mitotic entry after treatment with ionizing radiation. Ticrr deficiency is embryonic-lethal in the absence of exogenous DNA damage because it is essential for normal cell cycle progression. Specifically, the loss of ticrr impairs DNA replication and disrupts the S/M checkpoint, leading to premature mitotic entry and mitotic catastrophe. We show that the human TICRR ortholog associates with TopBP1, a known checkpoint protein and a core component of the DNA replication preinitiation complex (pre-IC), and that the TICRR-TopBP1 interaction is stable without chromatin and requires BRCT motifs essential for TopBP1's replication and checkpoint functions. Most importantly, we find that ticrr deficiency disrupts chromatin binding of pre-IC, but not prereplication complex, components. Taken together, our data show that TICRR acts in association with TopBP1 and plays an essential role in pre-IC formation. It remains to be determined whether Ticrr represents the vertebrate ortholog of the yeast pre-IC component Sld3, or a hitherto unknown metazoan replication and checkpoint regulator.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Metformin as adjunct antituberculosis therapy.

2014-11-19

[Sci. Transl. Med. 6(263) , 263ra159, (2014)]

Magnesium sulfate provides neuroprotection in lipopolysaccharide-activated primary microglia by inhibiting NF-κB pathway.

2013-10-01

[J. Surg. Res. 184(2) , 944-50, (2013)]

Activity-dependent regulation of tyrosine hydroxylase expression in the enteric nervous system.

2008-04-01

[J. Physiol. 586(7) , 1963-75, (2008)]

More Articles...