| Literature DB >> 22879408 |
Raymund J Wellinger1, Virginia A Zakian.
Abstract
The mechanisms that maintain the stability of chromosome ends have broad impact on genome integrity in all eukaryotes. Budding yeast is a premier organism for telomere studies. Many fundamental concepts of telomere and telomerase function were first established in yeast and then extended to other organisms. We present a comprehensive review of yeast telomere biology that covers capping, replication, recombination, and transcription. We think of it as yeast telomeres--soup to nuts.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22879408 PMCID: PMC3415994 DOI: 10.1534/genetics.111.137851
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genetics ISSN: 0016-6731 Impact factor: 4.562
Figure 1 DNA structure and major protein components of telomeres. (A) DNA arrangement at telomeres indicating the subtelomeric X and Y′ elements as well as the terminal repeat sequences. Red strand, G-rich strand with 3′ overhanging end and blue strand, C-rich strand with 5′ end. Core X and STR (subtelomeric repeated elements; Louis ) represent subareas in the X element. (B) Proteins are schematically positioned on the telomere drawing and the identity of the symbols explained on the bottom. Open circles represent nucleosomes (not to scale).
Major genes affecting Saccharomyces cerevisiae telomeres
| Gene name | aa/MW (KD) | Essential (yes/no) | Function(s) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Structural proteins | ||||
| 827/92.4 | Yes | Sequence-specific double-strand DNA binding telomere capping and length regulation, TPE, major transcription factor. | ||
| Cdc 13 complex | 924/104.9 | Yes | Three-protein complex comprised of Cdc13p, Stn1p, and Ten1p, which binds single-strand TG1-3 DNA in sequence-specific manner, capping, telomerase recruitment. | |
| 494/57.5 | No | |||
| 160/18.6 | No | |||
| 1916/217.9 | No | Interacts w. Rap1p; telomerase regulator. | ||
| 395/45.6 | No | Interacts w. Rap1p; telomerase regulator, capping. | ||
| YKu complex | 602/70.6 | No | Interacts w. TLC1; telomere length regulation; capping; TPE; telomere positioning; nonhomologous end joining. | |
| 629/71.2 | No | |||
| 562/63.2 | No | Interact w. Sir4p; essential for TPE and HM silencing, histone deacetylase. | ||
| 978/111.3 | No | Interacts with w. Rap1p, Sir4p, histone tails; essential for TPE and HM silencing. | ||
| 1358/152.0 | No | Interacts with Yku80p, Sir2p, Rap1p, and histone tails; essential for TPE and HM silencing; telomere positioning. | ||
| 562/62.8 | Yes | TPE boundary function, telomerase recruitment to short telomeres; transcription factor. | ||
| 352/40.8 | No | Meiosis specific, telomere binding, essential for bouquet formation. | ||
| Telomere replication | ||||
| 699/81.7 | No | Protein subunit of telomerase; recruitment, activation. | ||
| 884/102.6 | No | Protein subunit of telomerase; catalytic reverse transcriptase. | ||
| 181/20.5 | No | Protein subunit of telomerase. | ||
| 1157 nt | No | Telomerase RNA; repeat templating. | ||
| 859/87.6 | No | DNA helicase, removes telomerase from DNA, also required for maintenance of mitochondrial and nontelomeric nuclear DNA. | ||
| 2787/321.5 | No | Interacts w. Xrs2p, telomere length regulation; telomerase recruitment; S phase checkpoint kinase. | ||
| 692/77.6 | No | Acts as complex in same pathway as | ||
| 1312/152.5 | ||||
| 854/96.3 | ||||
| 2368/273.3 | Yes | Major DNA damage checkpoint kinase; partially redundant function with Tel1p in telomerase recruitment; activated when very short or no telomere; | ||
| 723/81.5 | No | DNA helicase, semiconservative telomere replication; promotes replication at many nontelomeric sites. | ||
| Processing and recombination | ||||
| 1447/163.8 | No | DNA helicase, end processing DSBs and telomeres, required for type II survivors; rDNA recombination. | ||
| 471/52.4 | No | Essential for all homologous recombination, including type I and type II survivors. | ||
| 400/42.9 | No | Homologous recombination, required for type I survivors. | ||
| 345/40.0 | No | 5′ strand resection at DSBs and telomeres. | ||
| 702/80.1 | No | Nuclease, 5′ end resection at DSBs and telomeres. | ||
| 1522/171.6 | Yes | Helicase-nuclease; 5′ end resection at telomeres and DSBs; Okazaki fragment maturation. | ||
| 350/40.3 | No | Subunit of DNA pol δ; required for break-induced replication and both type I and type II survivors. | ||
See text for details and references; although many genes are involved in more than one process, each is listed here under only one heading. Essential/nonessential refers to viability, not telomere maintenance. aa, number of amino acids; MW sizes are from the SGD website http:/www.yeastgenome.org/.
Figure 2 Overall domain organizations and interaction areas for major telomeric proteins. Shown are Rap1p, members of the Cdc13 complex, and three protein subunits of the telomerase holoenzyme. Due to the paucity of information for Rif1p or Rif2p, they are omitted. For details on domain definitions, see text. Known interaction domains with other proteins, RNA, or DNA are indicated with a double arrow. Below the proteins, numbers define amino acid positions. Small up arrow indicates known amino acid modifications that affect functions and the red step on Est3p denotes a required +1 frameshift in protein translation.
Figure 3 Preventing DNA damage checkpoint signaling at telomeres. Schematic of hypotheses for how DNA damage checkpoint signaling is prevented (A) during the passage of the replication fork through the double-stranded telomeric repeat area and (B) after having passed the end. Symbols are as in Figure 1.
Figure 4 Molecular models for telomere replication. (A) DNA structures thought to be generated during telomere replication when the replication fork is still in the double-stranded telomeric repeats (left) and after having reached the physical end (right). Strand colors as in Figure 1. Brown, subtelomeric sequences. (B) Proposed telomeric chromatin changes during a cell cycle. Note that telomerase elongation drawn for late S does not occur on all telomeres in every cell cycle. This step occurs preferentially on short telomeres. Bottom shows involved proteins and complexes as well as a sketch of the proposed secondary structure of the TLC1 RNA with associated proteins (telomerase). Short red line in RNA indicates templating area. Symbols for other proteins are the same as in Figure 1.
Figure 5 Outline of the proposed sequence of events leading to telomere maintenance via recombination after telomerase loss. DNA strand coloring is as above. Tick marks on the brown sequence indicate a conserved XhoI restriction enzyme site. Most cells die after ∼50–100 generations of growth, but rare cells with the indicated two types of DNA arrangements can continue to divide. Virtually all events are dependent on RAD52 and POL32. Bottom: Typical southern blot analysis using XhoI-digested DNA derived from indicated strains. The probe consisted of a 32P labeled DNA fragment specific for telomeric repeat sequences. M, molecular size standards; yku, DNA derived from a strain lacking YKU80 and harboring short terminal repeat tracts. WT, DNA from a wild-type strain; type I, DNA from type I survivors; type II, DNA derived from type II survivors. Red square, location of terminal XhoI fragments. Blue square, signal for the amplified Y′ elements in type I survivors. Note that the fragment pattern for type II survivors is highly variable and unstable; thus the patterns shown in the last two lanes should be taken as an example for illustration purposes only.