Abstract

The Crt1 (RFX1) protein in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is an effector of the DNA damage checkpoint pathway. It recognizes a 13-bp cis-regulatory element in the 5'-untranslated region (5'-UTR) of the ribonucleotide reductase genes RNR2, RNR3, and RNR4; the HUG1 gene; and itself. We calculated the weight matrix representing the Crt1p binding site motif according to analysis of the 5'-UTR sequences of the genes that are under its regulation. We subsequently searched the 5'-UTR sequences of all the genes in the yeast genome for the occurrence of this motif. The motif was found in regulatory regions of 30 genes. A statistical analysis showed that it is unlikely that a random gene cluster contains the motif conserved as well as the Crt1p binding site. Analysis of microarray data provided supporting evidence for five putative Crt1p targets: FSH3, YLR345W, UBC5, NDE2, and NTH2. We used reverse transcription-PCR to compare the expression levels of these genes in wild-type and crt1Delta strains. Our results indicated that FSH3, YLR345W, and NTH2 are indeed under the regulation of Crt1p. Sequence analysis of the FSH3p indicated that this protein may be involved in folate metabolism either by carrying serine hydrolase activity required for the novel metabolic pathway involving dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) or by directly interacting with the DHFR enzyme. We postulate that Crt1p may influence deoxyribonucleotide synthesis not only by regulating expression of the RNR genes but also by modulating DHFR activity. FSH3p shares significant sequence similarity with the product of the human tumor suppressor gene OVCA2. YLR345Wp and NTH2p are enzymes involved in the central metabolism under stress conditions.

Highlights

  • High fidelity of transmission of genetic information is crucial for the survival of living organisms

  • One cannot a priori exclude the possibility that the regulatory region of the HUG1 gene contains the site that would better conform to a Crt1p binding site motif than the putative site proposed by Basrai et al [4]

  • We used the 5Ј-UTR sequences of the known regulatory targets of the Crt1 transcription factor to determine the weight matrix representing its binding site sequence motif

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Summary

Reverse primer

5Ј-CTCGAACGACAATAGCAAC-3Ј 5Ј-AAGACGCTGAAAATCACAAG-3Ј 5Ј-CAGAACGTCCTCAGCATTTG-3Ј 5Ј-CATCGAGAGATGGATTTCC-3Ј 5Ј-TCTTGGGGGCTACTTAGTC-3Ј 5Ј-GCCAAATGTGCTTTCTGATG-3Ј 5Ј-AATCGAACCCACCCAAACAG-3Ј 5Ј-GGATCTCGCTTTAGATGAG-3Ј 5Ј-AAGACCTGTAGGGGATGACCTGTAT-3Ј 5Ј-CATTCAAACGCCAACCATC-3Ј. 5Ј-GAAAGAAAGTGGGTAAGCAG-3Ј 5Ј-CGAAAAAGGCAAGAACTCTG-3Ј 5Ј-GTACCAGCGATATAAGAACC-3Ј 5Ј-TTGGGGTTTGGCTTGGTTC-3Ј 5Ј-CTTGGGATACGAATGGTTTC-3Ј 5Ј-AACGATTTCGTCCTAACTCC-3Ј 5Ј-GCGCCTACACTAACAACAAG-3Ј 5Ј-CTGGGCAGTTATATGGAAC-3Ј 5Ј-AAGGATCGTCGGGATTAGCATCTGTTAAAAGAGAG-3Ј 5Ј-CCATTACCACCATAGAAGC-3Ј. Ature data and the protein sequence of FSH3 suggests that the Mec1p-Rad53p-Dun1p-Crt1p signal transduction pathway may control deoxyribonucleotide synthesis at the level of ribonucleotide reductase activity and by altering one-carbon group metabolism and purine ring synthesis. The fact that YLR345W and NTH2 are regulated by Crt1p indicates the regulatory link between DNA damage response and central metabolism

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Protein degradation
Full Text
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