AI Article Synopsis

  • Mammalian cells have two types of DNA topoisomerase II, alpha and beta, with distinct functions and structure.
  • Mouse topoisomerase IIalpha can effectively replace yeast topoisomerase II, allowing for studies on specific regions, particularly the C-terminal domain (CTD), which is crucial for nuclear localization but not for enzyme activity.
  • Experiments using GFP showed that while both CTDs signal for nuclear localization, their behavior during the cell cycle differs: topoisomerase IIalpha is localized to the nucleus during mitosis and absent during interphase, whereas topoisomerase IIbeta is mostly in the nucleus during interphase and less so in mitosis.

Article Abstract

Mammalian cells express two genetically distinct isoforms of DNA topoisomerase II, designated topoisomerase IIalphaand topoisomerase IIbeta. We have recently shown that mouse topoisomerase IIalpha can substitute for the yeast topoisomerase II enzyme and complement yeast top2 mutations. This functional complementation allowed functional analysis of the C-terminal domain (CTD) of mammalian topoisomerase II, where the amino acid sequences are divergent and species-specific, in contrast to the highly conserved N-terminal and central domains. Several C-terminal deletion mutants of mouse topoisomerase IIalpha were constructed and expressed in yeast top2 cells. We found that the CTD of topoisomerase IIalphais dispensable for enzymatic activity in vitro but is required for nuclear localization in vivo. Interestingly, the CTD of topoisomerase IIbetawas also able to function as a signal for nuclear targeting. We therefore examined whether the CTD alone is sufficient for nuclear localization in vivo . The C-terminal region was fused to GFP (green fluorescent protein) and expressed under the GAL1 promoter in yeast cells. As expected, GFP signal was exclusively detected in the nucleus, irrespective of the CTD derived from either topoisomerase IIalphaor IIbeta. Surprisingly, when the upstream sequence of each CTD was added nuclear localization of the GFP signal was found to be cell cycle dependent: topoisomerase IIalpha-GFP was seen in the mitotic nucleus but was absent from the interphase nucleus, while topoisomerase IIbeta-GFP was detected predominantly in the interphase nucleus and less in the mitotic nucleus. Our results suggest that the catalytically dispensable CTD of topoisomerase II is sufficient as a signal for nuclear localization and that yeast cells can distinguish between the two isoforms of mammalian topoisomerase II, localizing each protein properly.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC146861PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/25.15.3135DOI Listing

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