Abstract

The nda1+ and nda4+ genes of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe encode proteins similar to budding yeast MCM2 and MCM5/CDC46, respectively, which are required for the early stages of DNA replication. The budding yeast Mcm proteins display cell-cycle dependent localization. They are present in the nucleus specifically from late M phase until the beginning of S phase, so that they were suggested to be components of a replication licensing factor, a positive factor for the onset of replication, which is thought to be inactivated after use, thus restricting replication to only once in a cell cycle. In the present study, we raised antibodies against Nda1 or Nda4 and identified 115 kDa and 80 kDa proteins, respectively. Their immunolocalization was examined in wild-type cells and in various cell-cycle mutants. Both Nda1 and Nda4 proteins remained primarily in the nucleus throughout the cell cycle. In mutants arrested in G1, S, and G2 phases, these proteins were also enriched in the nucleus. These results indicate that the dramatic change in subcellular localization as seen in budding yeast is not essential in fission yeast for the functions of Nda1 and Nda4 proteins to be executed. The histidine-tagged nda1+ gene was constructed and integrated into the chromosome to replace the wild-type nda1+ gene. The resulting His-tagged Nda1 protein was adsorbed to the Ni-affinity column, and co-eluted with the untagged Nda4 protein, suggesting that they formed a complex.

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