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. 1988 Jan;8(1):293–300. doi: 10.1128/mcb.8.1.293

Differential regulation of the yeast CDC7 gene during mitosis and meiosis.

R A Sclafani 1, M Patterson 1, J Rosamond 1, W L Fangman 1
PMCID: PMC363120  PMID: 3275871

Abstract

The product of the CDC7 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is known to be required in the mitotic cell cycle for the initiation of DNA replication. We show that changes in transcript levels do not account for this stage-specific function, since the steady-state mRNA concentration remains constant at 1 copy per cell throughout the cell cycle. By measuring the cell division capacity of a cdc7::URA3 mutant after loss of a single-copy plasmid containing the CDC7 gene, we show that the CDC7 protein is present in at least 200-fold excess of the amount required for a single cell division. These results appear to exclude periodic transcription or translation as a means by which CDC7 function is regulated. In contrast, the CDC7 protein is known to be dispensable for meiotic S phase, but is required for synaptonemal complex formation and recombination. We found that the CDC7 transcript level does vary during meiosis, reaching a maximum near the time at which recombination occurs. Meiotic spores containing a cdc7 null allele germinate but fail to complete cell division. Apparently the excess CDC7 product present in mitotic cells is physically excluded from the spores (or becomes inactivated) and must be produced de novo after germination. The cdc7-1 allele had previously been shown to confer a reduction in the rate of induced mutation. We show that the cloned wild-type CDC7 gene not only complements this defect, but that when the CDC7 gene is on a multiple copy plasmid, induced mutagenesis is increased. Therefore, in contrast to the excess CDC7 activity for cell division, the level of activity for some error-prone repair process may be normally limiting.

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Selected References

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