Abstract

The DNA damage checkpoint regulates DNA replication and arrests cell cycle progression in response to genotoxic stress. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the protein kinase Rad53 plays a central role in preventing genomic instability and maintaining viability in the presence of replication stress and DNA damage. Activation of Rad53 depends on phosphorylation by the upstream kinase Mec1, followed by autophosphorylation on multiple residues. Also critical for cell viability, the molecular mechanism of Rad53 deactivation remains incompletely understood. Rad53 dephosphorylation after repair of a persistent double strand break in G(2)/M has been shown to depend on the presence of the PP2C-type phosphatases Ptc2 and Ptc3. More recently, the PP2A-like protein phosphatase Pph3 has been shown to be required to dephosphorylate Rad53 after DNA methylation damage in S phase. However, we show here that Ptc2/3 are dispensable for Rad53 deactivation after replication stress or DNA methylation damage. Pph3 is also dispensable for the deactivation of Rad53 after replication stress. In addition, Rad53 kinase activity is still deactivated in pph3 null cells after DNA methylation damage, despite persistent Rad53 hyperphosphorylation. Finally, a strain in which the three phosphatases are deleted shows a severe defect in Rad53 kinase deactivation after DNA methylation damage but not after replication stress. In all, our results suggest that distinct phosphatases operate to return Rad53 to its basal state after different genotoxic stresses and that a yet unidentified phosphatase may be responsible for the deactivation of Rad53 after replication stress.

Highlights

  • The elements that constitute this surveillance mechanism are highly conserved in eukaryotic cells and follow the typical structure of signal transduction pathways [6]

  • PP2C-type phosphatases Ptc2 and Ptc3 have been shown to be necessary for checkpoint recovery once DNA double strand break (DSB)2 damage is repaired in G2/M [22, 23]

  • In contrast with the requirement of Pph3 for Rad53 dephosphorylation after DNA methylation damage [31], Pph3 is dispensable for recovery of Rad53 after replication stress, indicating that a different phosphatase may be responsible for Rad53 deactivation after this type of genotoxic stress

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Summary

Introduction

The elements that constitute this surveillance mechanism are highly conserved in eukaryotic cells and follow the typical structure of signal transduction pathways [6]. Pph3 Is Dispensable for Rad53 Dephosphorylation and Deactivation Following Replication Stress—It has been recently reported that the type 2A-like protein phosphatase Pph3 is required for Rad53 dephosphorylation after DNA methylation damage generated with MMS in S phase [31].

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