Abstract

We have examined the roles of eukaryotic DNA topoisomerases I and II in DNA replication by the use of a set of four isogenic strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae that are TOP1 + TOP2 +, TOP1 + top2 ts, Δ top1 TOP2 +, and Δ top1 top2 ts. Cells synchronized by treatment with the α-mating factor, or by cycles of feeding and starvation, were released from cell-cycle arrest, and the size distribution of DNA chains that were synthesized after the cells re-entered the S-phase was determined as a function of time. The results indicate that synthesis of short DNA chains several thousand nucleotides in length can initiate in the absence of both topoisomerases, but their further elongation requires at least one of the two topoisomerases. Inactivation of DNA topoisomerase II does not alter significantly the time dependence of the patterns of nascent DNA chain synthesis, which is consistent with the notion that the requirement of this enzyme for viability is due to its essential role during mitosis, when pairs of intertwined newly replicated chromosomes are being segregated. The absence of DNA topoisomerase I leads to a temporary delay in the extension of the short DNA chains; this delay in chain elongation is also reflected in the rate of total DNA synthesis in the Δ top1 mutant during the early S-phase. Thus, in wild-type cells. DNA topoisomerase I is probably the major replication swivel. The patterns of DNA synthesis in asynchronously grown Δ top1 top2 ts cells at permissive and non-permissive temperatures are also consistent with the above conclusions.

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