Activation of the meiotic transcription factor Ndt80 is a key regulatory transition in the life cycle of Saccharomyces cerevisiae because it triggers exit from pachytene and entry into meiosis. The NDT80 promoter is held inactive by a complex containing the DNA-binding protein Sum1 and the histone deacetylase Hst1. Meiosis-specific phosphorylation of Sum1 by the protein kinases Cdk1, Ime2, and Cdc7 is required for NDT80 expression. Here, we show that the S-phase-promoting cyclin Clb5 activates Cdk1 to phosphorylate most, and perhaps all, of the 11 minimal cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) phospho-consensus sites (S/T-P) in Sum1. Nine of these sites can individually promote modest levels of meiosis, yet these sites function in a quasiadditive manner to promote substantial levels of meiosis. Two Cdk1 sites and an Ime2 site individually promote high levels of meiosis, likely by preparing Sum1 for phosphorylation by Cdc7. Chromatin immunoprecipitation reveals that the phosphorylation sites are required for removal of Sum1 from the NDT80 promoter. We also find that Sum1, but not its partner protein Hst1, is required to repress NDT80 transcription. Thus, while the phosphorylation of Sum1 may lead to dissociation from DNA by influencing Hst1, it is the presence of Sum1 on DNA that determines whether NDT80 will be expressed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/MCB.01413-13 | DOI Listing |
Mol Cell Biol
June 2014
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Activation of the meiotic transcription factor Ndt80 is a key regulatory transition in the life cycle of Saccharomyces cerevisiae because it triggers exit from pachytene and entry into meiosis. The NDT80 promoter is held inactive by a complex containing the DNA-binding protein Sum1 and the histone deacetylase Hst1. Meiosis-specific phosphorylation of Sum1 by the protein kinases Cdk1, Ime2, and Cdc7 is required for NDT80 expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Crystallogr C
October 2012
Department of Chemistry, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Iran.
In the phosphoric triamides N,N,N',N'-tetrabenzyl-N''-(2-chloro-2,2-difluoroacetyl)phosphoric triamide, C(30)H(29)ClF(2)N(3)O(2)P, (I), N,N,N',N'-tetrabenzyl-N''-(3-fluorobenzoyl)phosphoric triamide, C(35)H(33)FN(3)O(2)P, (II), and N,N,N',N'-tetrabenzyl-N''-(3,5-difluorobenzoyl)phosphoric triamide, C(35)H(32)F(2)N(3)O(2)P, (III), the tertiary N atoms of the dibenzylamido groups have sp(2) character with minimal deviation from planarity. The sums of the three bond angles about the N atoms in (I)-(III) deviate by less than 8° from the planar value of 360°. The geometries of the tertiary N atoms in all phosphoric triamides with C(O)NHP(O)[N](2) skeletons deposited in the Cambridge Structural Database [CSD; Allen (2002).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Cell Biol
January 2012
Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York, USA.
Meiosis divides the chromosome number of the cell in half by having two rounds of chromosome segregation follow a single round of chromosome duplication. The first meiotic division is unique in that homologous pairs of sister chromatids segregate to opposite poles. Recent work in budding and fission yeast has shown that the cell cycle kinase, Cdc7-Dbf4, is required for many meiosis-specific chromosomal functions necessary for proper disjunction at meiosis I.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Cell Biol
August 2009
Thomas Jefferson University, 233 S. 10th St., Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA.
Meiotic development in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (sporulation) is controlled by the sequential transcription of temporally distinct sets of meiosis-specific genes. The induction of middle genes controls exit from meiotic prophase, the completion of the nuclear divisions, and spore formation. Middle promoters are controlled through DNA elements termed middle sporulation elements (MSEs) that are bound by the Sum1 repressor during vegetative growth and by the Ndt80 activator during meiosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochemistry
January 2007
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107, USA.
Ime2 is a meiosis-specific protein kinase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae that is functionally related to cyclin-dependent kinase. Although Ime2 regulates multiple steps in meiosis, only a few of its substrates have been identified. Here we show that Ime2 phosphorylates Sum1, a repressor of meiotic gene transcription, on Thr-306.
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