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DNA Dynamics and Chromosome Structure

DNA Replication Forks Pause at Silent Origins near the HML Locus in Budding Yeast

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Pages 4938-4948 | Received 11 Oct 2000, Accepted 09 May 2001, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Chromosomal replicators in budding yeast contain an autonomously replicating sequence (ARS) that functions in a plasmid, but certain ARSs are silent as replication origins in their natural chromosomal context. In chromosome III, the HML ARS cluster (ARS302-ARS303-ARS320) and ARS301 flank the transcriptionally silent mating-type locus HML, and all of these ARSs are silent as replication origins. ARS301 andARS302 function in transcriptional silencing mediated by the origin recognition complex (ORC) and a heterochromatin structure, while the functions of ARS303 and ARS320 are not known. In this work, we discovered replication fork pause sites at the HML ARS cluster and ARS301 by analyzing DNA replication intermediates from the chromosome via two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The replication fork pause at the HML ARS cluster was independent of cis- andtrans-acting mutations that abrogate transcriptional silencing at HML. Deletion of the HML ARS cluster led to loss of the pause site. Insertion of a single, heterologous ARS (ARS305) in place of the HMLARS cluster reconstituted the pause site, as did multiple copies of DNA elements (A and B1) that bind ORC. The orc2-1 mutation, known to alter replication timing at origins, did not detectably affect the pause but activated the silent origin at the HML ARS cluster in a minority of cells. Delaying the time of fork arrival atHML led to the elimination of the pause sites at the HML ARS cluster and at the copy of ARS305inserted in place of the cluster. Loss of the pause sites was accompanied by activation of the silent origins in the majority of cells. Thus, replication fork movement near HML pauses at a silent origin which is competent for replication initiation but kept silent through Orc2p, a component of the replication initiator. Possible functions for replication fork pause sites in checkpoints, S-phase regulation, mating-type switching, and transcriptionally silent heterochromatin are discussed.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank James Broach, Phil Hieter, Carol Newlon, Jasper Rine, and Bruce Stillman for yeast strains and plasmids. Thanks go to Martha Eddy for technical assistance and to Ruea Huang and John Yates for helpful comments on the manuscript.

This work was supported in part by shared resources of Roswell Park Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA16056) and by grant GM-30614 from the National Institutes of Health.

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