Publication | Open Access
DBF8, an essential gene required for efficient chromosome segregation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
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Citations
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References
1994
Year
GeneticsGenomic MechanismMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsDbf8 AllelesGenomicsEssential GeneYeastGenome InstabilityCell DivisionSaccharomyces CerevisiaeDna ReplicationChromosomal RearrangementChromatin FunctionChromatinChromosome DynamicsChromatin StructureChromosome SegregationNatural SciencesEfficient Chromosome SegregationChromosome BiologyMedicineDbf8 Mutants Exhibit
To investigate chromosome segregation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we examined a collection of temperature-sensitive mutants that arrest as large-budded cells at restrictive temperatures (L. H. Johnston and A. P. Thomas, Mol. Gen. Genet. 186:439-444, 1982). We characterized dbf8, a mutation that causes cells to arrest with a 2c DNA content and a short spindle. DBF8 maps to chromosome IX near the centromere, and it encodes a 36-kDa protein that is essential for viability at all temperatures. Mutational analysis reveals that three dbf8 alleles are nonsense mutations affecting the carboxy-terminal third of the encoded protein. Since all of these mutations confer temperature sensitivity, it appears that the carboxyl-terminal third of the protein is essential only at a restrictive temperature. In support of this conclusion, an insertion of URA3 at the same position also confers a temperature-sensitive phenotype. Although they show no evidence of DNA damage, dbf8 mutants exhibit increased rates of chromosome loss and nondisjunction even at a permissive temperature. Taken together, our data suggest that Dbf8p plays an essential role in chromosome segregation.
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