Genetics, Vol. 154, 167-179, January 2000, Copyright © 2000

Hypomorphic bimAAPC3 Alleles Cause Errors in Chromosome Metabolism That Activate the DNA Damage Checkpoint Blocking Cytokinesis in Aspergillus nidulans

Tom D. Wolkowa, Peter M. Mirabitob, Srinivas Venkatramb, and John E. Hamera
a Department of Biology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907-1392
b Molecular and Cellular Biology Section, School of Biological Sciences, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506-0225

Corresponding author: Tom D. Wolkow, Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, 200 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115., wolkow{at}rascal.med.harvard.edu (E-mail)

Communicating editor: R. H. DAVIS


*  ABSTRACT
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

The Aspergillus nidulans sepI+ gene has been implicated in the coordination of septation with nuclear division and cell growth. We find that the temperature-sensitive (ts) sepI1 mutation represents a novel allele of bimAAPC3, which encodes a conserved component of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C). We have characterized the septation, nuclear division, cell-cycle checkpoint defects, and DNA sequence alterations of sepI1 (renamed bimA10) and two other ts lethal bimAAPC3 alleles, bimA1 and bimA9. Our observations that bimA9 and bimA10 strains had morphologically abnormal nuclei, chromosome segregation defects, synthetic phenotypes with mutations in the DNA damage checkpoint genes uvsBMEC1/rad3 or uvsD+, and enhanced sensitivity to hydroxyurea strongly suggest that these strains accumulate errors in DNA metabolism. We found that the aseptate phenotype of bimA9 and bimA10 strains was substantially relieved by mutations in uvsBMEC1/rad3 or uvsD+, suggesting that the presence of a functional DNA damage checkpoint inhibits septation in these bimAAPC3 strains. Our results demonstrate that mutations in bimAAPC3 lead to errors in DNA metabolism that indirectly block septation.


CYTOKINESIS is temporally coordinated with the nuclear division cycle to help ensure the proper segregation of genetic material and cytoplasm to daughter cells. The strict temporal coupling between mitosis and cytokinesis complicates genetic and biochemical studies of this coordination (reviewed by SATTERWHITE and POLLARD 1992 Down) because mitotic regulatory molecules likely control both processes by distinct mechanisms. For instance, studies in both animal and fungal cells suggest that cyclin-dependent kinase activity coordinates both events by suppressing cytokinesis until exit from mitosis has begun (SATTERWHITE et al. 1992 Down; WHEATLEY et al. 1997 Down; reviewed by FISHKIND and WANG 1995 Down; GOULD and SIMANIS 1997 Down).

Septum formation in Aspergillus nidulans affords a unique opportunity to study cytokinesis as an event temporally separated from, although dependent on, the nuclear division cycle. Conidia of A. nidulans have a single nucleus arrested in G1 of the cell cycle (BERGEN and MORRIS 1983 Down). Following germination, nuclear division and germ tube extension occur. Three rounds of nuclear division (producing eight nuclei) take place before the onset of septation (FIDDY and TRINCI 1976 Down; HARRIS et al. 1994 Down). Experiments with various mitotic mutants have demonstrated that this pattern of growth, nuclear division, and septation are dependent on controls that ensure that germlings acquire a minimum threshold cell size and undergo at least one nuclear division before cytokinesis. Thus, small germlings having undergone only one or two rounds of nuclear division are aseptate (WOLKOW et al. 1996 Down). Septation in A. nidulans is also dependent upon a contractile actin ring. Both formation and contraction of the actin ring require intact microtubules, while positioning of the ring is influenced by the distribution of nuclei (WOLKOW et al. 1996 Down; MOMANY and HAMER 1997 Down).

To identify genes involved in cytokinesis, temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants, which do not septate after germ tube extension and multiple rounds of nuclear division, were identified (HARRIS et al. 1994 Down). sep (septation defective) mutants are operationally grouped into distinct classes termed "early" or "late." Late mutants (sepA, D, G, and H) undergo continuous nuclear division and apical growth at the restrictive temperature but fail to septate. Early mutants (sepB, E, I, and J) undergo only approximately three nuclear divisions in the presence of an extending germ tube before arresting growth as aseptate cells. Unlike late mutants, early sep mutants do not septate after return to permissive temperature, suggesting these mutants are unable to initiate early events of the septation process.

The early sepB+ gene encodes an essential protein required for efficient chromosome segregation (HARRIS and HAMER 1995 Down). sepB3 mutants accumulate defects in chromosome metabolism that eventually prevent the initiation of septation and lead to growth arrest. It has recently been shown that the aseptate phenotype of sepB3 and sepJ1 germlings requires components of the DNA damage checkpoint (HARRIS and KRAUS 1998 Down). In addition, DNA-damaging agents and genetically elevated levels of Tyr-15-phosphorylated p34nimX/cdc2 also inhibit septation (HARRIS and KRAUS 1998 Down; X. YE, T. WOLKOW, A. TANG, R. FINCHER, S. L. MCQUIRE, J. E. HAMER and S. A. OSMANI, unpublished results). These findings show that a checkpoint exists in A. nidulans that delays or even blocks cytokinesis in response to accumulated DNA damage. The finding that irradiated p53-/- and p21-/- human cells progress through mitosis but block cytokinesis (BUNZ et al. 1998 Down) suggests that this checkpoint may be a conserved feature of eukaryotic cells and occurs in a p53-independent fashion.

To gain further insight about the mechanisms linking nuclear division and cytokinesis, we characterized the early sepI1 mutant and cloned sepI+. Here we show that sepI1 is an allele of bimAAPC3, which encodes a component of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C; HERSHKO et al. 1994 Down; PETERS et al. 1996 Down). The APC/C is a ubiquitin ligase required for timely initiation of S phase (AMON et al. 1994 Down; BRANDEIS and HUNT 1996 Down; IRNIGER and NASMYTH 1997 Down; YE et al. 1997B Down) as well as anaphase progression and mitotic exit (reviewed by KING et al. 1996 Down; TOWNSLEY and RUDERMAN 1998 Down). It has also been implicated in cell-cycle checkpoints, including the spindle assembly (HE et al. 1997 Down; LI et al. 1997 Down; FANG et al. 1998 Down; KALLIO et al. 1998 Down; reviewed by RUDNER and MURRAY 1996 Down) and DNA damage checkpoints (COHEN-FIX and KOSHLAND 1997 Down) as well as the S-phase (YE et al. 1996 Down) and G2 checkpoints (LIES et al. 1998 Down) of A. nidulans (reviewed by OSMANI and YE 1997 Down).

To investigate the mechanism by which bimAAPC3 mutations affect septation, the three existing bimA alleles [bimA1, bimA9 and bimA10 (sepI1)] were characterized. Sequence alterations of the alleles were found to occur in different regions of bimAAPC3. Each allele produced phenotypes consistent with APC/C defects, such as aberrant mitotic progression and chromosome segregation, as well as failure to promote G2 arrest in the absence of normal NIMA function. Unlike bimA1, which has been shown to cause a metaphase arrest, both bimA9 and bimA10 caused early sep arrests. The phenotypic and genetic analyses presented here demonstrate that the accumulation of chromosome metabolism errors in bimA9 and bimA10 germlings activates a DNA damage checkpoint that blocks septation.


*  MATERIALS AND METHODS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Strains and growth conditions:
Strains of A. nidulans used in this study are listed in Table 1. CM media is 1% glucose, 0.2% peptone, 0.1% yeast extract, 0.1% casamino acids, nitrate salts, trace elements, and 0.01% vitamins, pH 6.5. Trace elements, vitamins, and nitrate salts are described in the appendix to KAFER 1977 Down. For solid media, 1.8% agar was added. Genetic techniques for A. nidulans are described in HARRIS et al. 1994 Down.


 
View this table:
In this window
In a new window

 
Table 1. A. nidulans strains

Strains designated nimA-alc contained alcA::nimA as the only functional nimA gene. Culture conditions for propagation and analysis of these strains are as described previously (LIES et al. 1998 Down).

To observe phenotypes, supplemented CM liquid was inoculated with 1–5 x 104 conidia/ml, poured into a petri dish containing glass coverslips (coverslip cultures), and incubated at 30° for permissive temperature and 42° or 46.5° for restrictive temperatures.

To follow nuclear division kinetics and chromosome mitotic index (%CMI) in germlings, coverslip cultures were incubated at 42°. At various intervals, coverslips were removed, fixed, and stained with Hoechst 33258 (Polysciences, Warrington, PA). To determine the percentage of germlings with septa, coverslip cultures were incubated at 42° for 10 hr. These germlings were stained with both Hoechst 33258 and Calcofluor (a gift from American Cyanamid) to observe nuclei and septa, respectively. Only germlings having at least eight nuclei in an extended germ tube were assayed for the presence of a septum. All experiments were repeated at least two times with similar results, and results from one experiment are shown.

Sensitivities of bimAAPC3, bimA1, bimA9, and bimA10 to hydroxyurea (HU) were examined at permissive temperature using CM-agar medium containing different concentrations of the drug (4, 6, 8, 10, or 15 mM HU). Conidia were plated at a concentration of ~200 spores per plate and allowed to grow for 4 days at 30°.

Recombinant DNA and transformation techniques:
The molecular biology techniques of SAMBROOK et al. 1989 Down were used throughout this study. DNA-mediated transformations and isolation of genomic DNA from A. nidulans were also accomplished using previously described methods (TIMBERLAKE 1990 Down; DOBINSON et al. 1993 Down; OAKLEY and OSMANI 1993 Down).

Cloning of the sepI+ gene:
Strain AJM86 was cotransformed with pDHG25 (Arg+ plasmid; kindly provided by Dr. J. Clutterbuck, University of Glasgow) and a chromosome I-specific cosmid library (BRODY et al. 1991 Down). Arg+ transformants were replica plated to MN plates and incubated at 42° to select for Ts+ transformants. Additional transformation experiments revealed that complementing activity resided on a 3.5-kb SacI fragment of cosmid L20D04. This SacI fragment was sequenced and found to contain the 3' region of bimAAPC3 (O'DONNELL et al. 1991 Down).

Staining and microscopy:
Fixing, staining, and microscopy methods are described by HARRIS et al. 1994 Down. The immunofluorescence microscopy technique used to detect microtubules has been described previously (OAKLEY and OSMANI 1993 Down). The primary antibody used was mouse anti-tubulin DM1A monoclonal (Sigma, St. Louis) at 1:200. The secondary antibody used was Texas red–goat anti-mouse IgG TRITC (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR).

Isolation and sequencing of bimA alleles:
Genomic DNA was prepared from A28, AJM86, MLC1-19, and PM144. Vent DNA polymerase (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) was used for PCR amplifications. Three overlapping sets of primers were used to amplify genomic DNA. Primer names and sequences are as follows: Bim1 (5'-CCG GAA TTC CAT TGG CCT CGA TTC CC-3'), Bim2 (5'-GCC CTT AAG TCC TGT TCC TGA AGA TGC CAC-3'), Bim3 (5'-CCG GAA TTC TTG AAT GGA AGC ACA GTT AGT-3'), Bim4 (5'-GCC CTT AAG CCA AAG AAC CGT CGA GTA GAT CTC-3'), Bim5 (5'-CCG GAA TTC GCG CCT TCC CGG TTA GAA GAT ATG-3'), and Bim6 (5'-GCC CTT AAG AGT GAA GAA GTA GGA CTG AA-3'). Two independent clones of each allele were sequenced multiple (more than two) times on both strands.

RNA transcript analysis:
RNA was extracted from 0.1 g of lyophilized mycelium using TRIzol reagent and the accompanying protocol (Life Technologies). RQ1 RNase-Free DNase (Promega, Madison, WI) was added to the recovered RNA. Reverse transciption (RT)-PCR was performed using the RETROscript first-strand synthesis kit (Ambion, Austin, TX). Primer p3 (5'-TCT TCA TCG TCG TCA AGG GC-3') was used to synthesize first-strand cDNA from wild-type and bimA10 RNAs. PCR amplification of the cDNA region immediately surrounding intron 3 was performed using Vent DNA polymerase and primers p3 and p1 (5'-AGA TGC TTC GTG ACA AGG GA-3').

Cell-cycle checkpoint assays:
The procedures of LIES et al. 1998 Down were used to determine if bimA10 alters the G2 checkpoint preventing entry into mitosis in the absence of NIMA function. nimA-alc mutants contain alcA::nimA as their only copy of nimA, such that germination in glucose medium results in arrest at an APC/C-dependent G2 checkpoint.

To determine if bimA10 alters the checkpoint delaying mitosis in the presence of HU, coverslip cultures containing conidia from ATW53 (bimA10/bimA10) or A852 (diploid, wild-type control) were placed at 42° or 30° for 4 hr in CM media containing both 10 mM HU and 5 µg/ml benomyl or containing only 5 µg/ml benomyl. Benomyl was added to the cultures so that cells would become trapped in mitosis for a period of time and, thus, enable an accurate determination of when cells entered mitosis on the basis of %CMI (YE et al. 1996 Down).

To determine if bimA10 alters the checkpoint that restrains spindle formation in the presence of HU, ATW53 and A852 conidia were germinated in coverslip cultures at 30° for 10 hr. The cultures were then split and incubated in fresh medium either with or without 10 mM HU at 30°. Samples were collected at 0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, and 2 hr and processed for immunofluorescence analysis to assay for the presence of mitotic spindles.

To determine if bimA10 affects recovery from a slowed S phase, genetically marked control and bimA10 diploids (ATW64 and 65; see Table 1) were germinated in the presence of HU. After 10 hr of growth at 30° in a shake-flask suspension culture, germlings were collected by centrifugation, washed with sterile water, and resuspended by vortexing in 1 ml sterile water. The germlings were plated on CM-agar medium at 30°, and the resultant colonies were monitored for evidence of mitotic recombination according to KAFER 1977 Down.


*  RESULTS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

sepI1 is an allele of bimAAPC3:
sepI1 was identified in a screen for ts septation mutants (HARRIS et al. 1994 Down). At the restrictive temperature, the majority of sepI1 germlings fail to septate despite having undergone multiple nuclear divisions in the presence of an extending germ tube. All associated phenotypes of sepI1 resulted from a single recessive mutation (data not shown). sepI1 was found to be linked to proA on chromosome I (data not shown). A chromosome I-specific library (BRODY et al. 1991 Down) was used to complement the ts growth of sepI1. Cosmid L20D04 was able to rescue all associated sepI1 phenotypes (data not shown). Sequence analysis of a complementing SacI fragment from the cosmid identified the 3' region of bimAAPC3 (O'DONNELL et al. 1991 Down; data not shown), suggesting that sepI+ is bimAAPC3.

Results from three experiments demonstrated that sepI1 is an allele of bimAAPC3. First, heterozygous diploids with the genotypes sepI1/bimA1 and sepI1/bimA9 were ts for growth, where bimA1 and bimA9 are ts, recessive mutations (MORRIS 1976 Down). Second, transformation of sepI1 strains with a plasmid containing the bimAAPC3 cDNA complemented all sepI1-associated phenotypes (data not shown). Third, the sepI1 mutant contains a mutation in bimAAPC3 that is predicted to dramatically alter BIMAAPC3 structure (see below). These results indicate that sepI1 is an allele of bimAAPC3 and, therefore, we have renamed it bimA10.

Sequence analyses of bimA1, bimA9, and bimA10:
To investigate the molecular basis of the bimAAPC3 mutant phenotypes, we sequenced genomic clones of bimAAPC3 and the bimA1, bimA9, and bimA10 mutant alleles. bimAAPC3 encodes an 806-amino-acid polypeptide containing 10 copies of a degenerate, 34-amino-acid sequence termed the tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR; SIKORSKI et al. 1990 Down; O'DONNELL et al. 1991 Down). The organization of the TPRs is highly conserved between fungi and humans (Fig 1A; adapted from TUGENDREICH et al. 1993 Down). We found that bimAAPC3 contains three introns: two between TPRs 0 and 1, and one at the end of TPR 9 (Fig 1B).



View larger version (27K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 1. Analysis of bimA alleles. (A) Diagrammatic representation of bimA+, CDC27 H.s., CDC27 S.c., and nuc2+. Asterisks denote the TPR units where mutations in ts bimA alleles were found. (B) Location and sequence of the bimA+ introns. Residue numbers are shown above single-letter codes and respective codons. (C) Mutations in bimA1, bimA9, and bimA10. TPR units containing mutations are underlined. Predicted residue alterations in bimA1 and bimA9 are shown in boldface type above sequence alignments of bimA+, CDC27 H.s., CDC27 S.c., and nuc2+ TPR units. The location of the mutation in bimA10 is indicated by an X. The arrow shows that the mutation changes the acceptor site of intron 3 from ag to aa. As a result, splicing of intron 3 occurs using the newly made aG as an intron acceptor site. This results in a frameshift caused by loss of the first G from codon 784 after intron 3 is spliced. This frameshift is predicted to direct the replacement of the remaining 23 residues of bimA+ with 63 new residues. The new stop codon is underlined.

The bimA1 allele contained T in place of the G in the first base of codon 690, and it directs the replacement of the conserved glycine in TPR 7 with cysteine (Fig 1C). The location of the mutation in bimA1 is in agreement with complementation experiments that positioned it in one of the carboxy-terminal TPR units (O'DONNELL et al. 1991 Down). The bimA9 allele contained C in place of the T in the second base of codon 136 in TPR 0 (Fig 1C). This mutation directed the replacement of leucine, a conserved hydrophobic residue, with the hydrophilic residue serine.

Sequencing of two independent genomic clones did not reveal the presence of a mutation in the coding region of bimA10. Analysis of intron splice sites showed that a G-to-A transition in the acceptor site of intron 3 had occurred (Fig 1B and Fig C). RT-PCR analyses of mRNA from wild-type and bimA10 mutants demonstrated that this mutation did not abolish the splicing of intron 3 (data not shown). Sequence analysis of a C-terminal portion of two independent bimA10 cDNA clones revealed that an alternative acceptor site containing the first G of codon 784 is used. Splicing of intron 3 in bimA10 truncates the remaining coding region by one base and causes a frameshift that is predicted to considerably alter the C terminus of BIMAAPC3. The 23 C-terminal residues, 4 of which belong to the 3' end of TPR 9, would be replaced with 63 new residues (Fig 1C). The predicted pI of the 23 residues that are removed is 3.4, whereas that of the 63 residues added is 10.4. This splicing error occurs at 30° and, therefore, is not temperature sensitive (data not shown).

bimAAPC3 mutants have polarity, nuclear division, and chromosome segregation defects:
We phenotypically compared the bimA1, bimA9, and bimA10 mutants. Although all three bimAAPC3 alleles are ts lethal mutations that caused at least a 90% loss in viability after 10 hr incubation at 42° (data not shown), each allele caused cells to arrest growth with distinctive, aberrant cellular morphologies (Fig 2; Table 2). bimA1 germlings (B and C) did not extend germ tubes, unlike wild-type (A), bimA9 (D–F) and bimA10 (G and H) germlings. Calcofluor was used in combination with Hoechst to observe septa, cell walls, and nuclei. Both bimA9 (data not shown) and bimA10 (Fig 2H) germlings displayed septation defects (HARRIS et al. 1994 Down; see Fig 7) as well as diffuse calcofluor-staining bands along their germ tubes, demonstrating that these mutants inappropriately deposit cell wall material. In addition, bimA10 germlings were irregularly shaped, containing swollen regions and unusual branching. The differential effects of these bimAAPC3 alleles on germling morphology suggest that the APC/C may play a role in the establishment or maintenance of polar growth in A. nidulans.



View larger version (70K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 2. Cellular morphologies of bimA+ and bimA germlings. Conidia from strains A28 (bimA+), PM156 (bimA1), MLC1-19 (bimA9), and ATW41 (bimA10) were germinated on coverslips in complete media at 42°. Coverslips were removed at various intervals, fixed, and stained. (A) A28 was fixed after 7 hr and stained with Hoechst 33258 and Calcofluor. (B and C) PM156 was fixed after 9 hr and stained with Hoechst 33258. (D) MLC1-19 was fixed after 7 or (E and F) 9 hr and stained with Hoechst 33258. (G) ATW41 was fixed after 9 hr and stained with Hoechst 33258 or (H) Hoechst 33258 and Calcofluor. To demonstrate abnormal nuclear division and morphology, arrowheads point to (D) nuclear clumping, (E and F) condensed chromatin, and (G) an anaphase bridge of chromatin. Bars, 5 µm.



View larger version (16K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 3. Mitotic progression in bimA mutants. (A) Nuclear division kinetics and (B) %CMI of bimA mutants. Conidia from strains A28 (bimA+), PM156 (bimA1), MLC1-19 (bimA9), and ATW41 (bimA10) were germinated on coverslips in complete media at 42°. At various time intervals, coverslips were removed, fixed, and stained with Hoechst 33258 to observe nuclei. Each data point was determined using 100 germlings.



View larger version (72K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 4. bimA10 affects both the synchrony and fidelity of mitosis. A28 (bimA+; A–D) and ATW41 (bimA10; E–J) were germinated on coverslips for 9 hr at 42°. Samples were then fixed and stained with Hoechst 33258 (left panels) and a mouse anti {alpha}-tubulin antibody (right panels). The arrowhead in E points to chromatin that is spread across an anaphase spindle. Bar, 5 µm.



View larger version (181K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 5. The bimA mutations cause defects in chromosome segregation. Conidia were spread onto CM plates and incubated for 10 hr at 42°. Plates were then placed at 30° for 3 days. (A) ASH60 (sepB3), (B) PM156 (bimA1), (C) MLC1-19 (bimA9), and (D) ATW41 (bimA10). Chromosome loss is indicated by the production of aneuploid colonies that are small and may contain haploid sectors that spread in radial arrays. Arrowheads point to typical aneuploid colonies, and the asterisk is positioned next to a haploid colony.



View larger version (20K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 6. bimA10 is defective for the G2 checkpoint, which blocks entry into mitosis when NIMA expression is deficient. The NIMA kinase is required for entry into mitosis. In the absence of normal NIMA function, BIMA restrains mitosis. bimA alleles were crossed into a strain with a single nimA+ kinase gene under the control of the glucose-repressible, ethanol-inducible alcA promoter. Coverslip cultures were incubated at 43° fixed, and stained with Hoechst 33258. For each data point, the %CMI was determined by measuring the percentage of germlings (N > 300) with condensed chromatin (MORRIS 1976 Down). {square}, nimA-alc (SFC466-201); {diamond}, bimA10 (ATW41); {circ}, nimA-alc, bimA1 (SFC466-48); {triangleup}, nimA-alc, bimA9 (SFC70-1); *, nimA-alc, bimA10 (SFC552-28).



View larger version (36K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 7. The uvs mutations allow septum formation in bimA9 and bimA10. (A) Conidia from strains A28 (bimA+), MLC1-19 (bimA9), ATW41 (bimA10), ATW55 (bimA9 uvsD153), ATW56 (bimA10 uvsD153), ATW57 (bimA10 uvsB110), and ATW66 (bimA9 uvsB110) were germinated on coverslips in complete media at 42° for 10 hr. Coverslips were then fixed and stained with Hoechst 33258 and Calcofluor. Percentage of germlings (N = 100) with septa was determined. Only germlings with at least eight nuclei in a germtube 70 µm or longer were considered. (B) Examples of bimA10 uvsD153 germlings with septa (ATW56 is shown). Bar, 5 µm. (C) Genetic interactions between bimA and uvs alleles. Conidia were point inoculated onto CM plates and incubated at 30° or 37° for 3 days. (From left to right) Row 1: MLC1-19 (bimA9) and ATW41 (bimA10). Row 2: ASH201 (uvsB110), ASH206 (uvsD153), and ATW66 (bimA9 uvsB110). Row 3: ATW55 (bimA9 uvsD153), ATW57 (bimA10 uvsB110), and ATW56 (bimA10 uvsD153).


 
View this table:
In this window
In a new window

 
Table 2. Cellular morphologies and mitotic progression of bimA mutants (raw data from Fig 2)

The terminal arrest morphology and spacing of nuclei also differed among bimAAPC3 mutants (Fig 2). Wild-type germlings (A) undergo synchronous nuclear divisions (CLUTTERBUCK 1970 Down) and are usually found with interphase nuclei, which contain spherical, non-Hoechst-staining nucleoli. Mitotic nuclei are smaller, do not have obvious nucleoli and stain more intensely. Wild-type germling 1 in Fig 2 has completed two nuclear divisions, while germlings 2 and 3 have completed three nuclear divisions. The nuclei of germlings 1 and 2 are arranged in pairs and are well separated from each other. Each pair represents daughter nuclei from the preceding nuclear divisions (SUELMANN et al. 1997 Down). Germling 3 has eight nuclei, five of which are evenly spaced along the germ tube. A septum is visible at the base of the germ tube in this cell.

Abnormal chromatin masses and mitotic nuclei were commonly observed in bimAAPC3 mutants. bimA1 germlings frequently arrested growth with one or two condensed nuclei (Fig 2B and Fig C; Table 2). Incubation at a slightly higher temperature resulted in a mitotic block during the first division (O'DONNELL et al. 1991 Down). Nuclear structure and distribution were abnormal in bimA9 (D–F) and bimA10 (G and H) mutants, with some cells containing mitotic nuclei, some containing interphase nuclei, and other cells containing both interphase and mitotic nuclei. This latter result shows that nuclei in some bimA9 and bimA10 cells underwent asynchronous divisions even though they were in a common cytoplasm. Unlike bimA1, the arrest phenotypes of bimA9 and bimA10 strains were not affected by increasing the incubation temperature (data not shown).

Mitotic progression of bimA1, bimA9, and bimA10 germlings was monitored (Fig 3; Table 2). After a 3-hr germination period, the wild-type control underwent a nuclear division approximately every hour (Fig 3A; Table 2). Half of the bimA1 germlings were able to execute one mitotic division with kinetics slower than the control, but they were unable to divide further (Fig 3A; Table 2). Many bimA1 cells accumulated a morphologically abnormal chromatin mass after 7 hr at the restrictive temperature. Both bimA9 and bimA10 mutants underwent their first nuclear division with kinetics similar to the control, but they progressively became more delayed in nuclear division. Like those of bimA1, many nuclei of bimA9 and bimA10 cells were morphologically abnormal (see Fig 2 and Fig 4). Interestingly, we observed a population of bimA10 germlings with nuclear division kinetics faster than those of the wild-type control (Table 2).

We calculated the percentage of mitotic cells (%CMI) in cultures of bimAAPC3 mutants to determine if the nuclear division delays occurred during mitosis (Fig 3B). The %CMI of the control strain ranged between 2 and 5%. bimA1 germlings accumulated an elevated %CMI. The 38% peak at 240 min represents the delay bimA1 encountered during the first mitosis, while the peak at 300 min represents the delay encountered during entry into a second mitosis. bimA1 germlings did not exit this second mitosis successfully, because germlings with four nuclei were not observed (Table 2). The majority of bimA9 and bimA10 germlings entered the first and second mitoses at ~220 and 280 min, and progression through these mitoses was delayed (Fig 3B).

bimA10 germlings were stained with Hoechst and antitubulin antibodies to further characterize the nuclear division defects (Fig 4). Fig 4A and Fig B, shows a typical wild-type germling undergoing a synchronous fourth nuclear division. The short spindles and condensed chromatin are typical of metaphase. The wild-type germling in Fig 4C and Fig D, has nuclei in late anaphase, as revealed by the long spindles connecting separate, condensed nuclei (JUNG et al. 1998 Down). Fig 4E–J, shows bimA10 germlings. Chromatin in bimA10 germlings was found abnormally stretched out along anaphase spindles (E and F). bimA10 germlings underwent asynchronous nuclear divisions, as indicated by the presence of spindle microtubules and faint cytoplasmic microtubules, as well as mitotic and interphase chromatin masses in a common cytoplasm (G and H). Large chromatin masses in bimA10 cells commonly had multiple spindles (H and J).

The anaphase bridges revealed by antitubulin staining suggested that chromosome segregation was defective in bimA mutants. We employed a genetic assay to test for chromosome segregation defects in bimA1, bimA9, and bimA10 germlings (Fig 5). Strains were germinated at 42° for 10 hr and then placed at the permissive temperature. Under these conditions, a small percent of bimA germlings survive. Formation of aneuploid colonies by this surviving population of germlings would indicate that defective chromosome segregation had occurred at the restrictive temperature. Identification of aneuploid colonies is easy because of their characteristic abnormal morphology (KAFER and UPSHALL 1973 Down). The sepB3 mutant has previously been shown to affect chromosome segregation in this and other assays (HARRIS and HAMER 1995 Down) and so was used in this experiment as a control. Fig 5 shows euploid and aneuploid colonies formed after the shift-down experiment. Approximately 20% (83/398) of bimA1, 28% (32/112) of bimA9, 12% (17/138) of bimA10, 24% (37/152) of sepB3, and 0% (0/200) of bimA+ surviving germlings gave rise to aneuploid colonies. Therefore, chromosome segregation is defective in bimAAPC3 mutants.

In addition to being required for completion of mitosis, bimAAPC3 is also required in late G2 to prevent premature entry into mitosis when the NIMA kinase is defective (LIES et al. 1998 Down; YE et al. 1998 Down). To determine if bimA10 affects bimAAPC3 function in this G2 checkpoint, we constructed nimA, bimA10 double mutants and assayed for entry into mitosis during spore germination under restrictive conditions for both nimA and bimA10. Fig 6 shows the results for nimA-alc, bimAAPC3 double mutants, where nimA-alc is an allele of nimA in which nimA expression is repressed by glucose (LIES et al. 1998 Down). Whereas nimA-alc single mutants fail to enter mitosis, up to 50% of the cells of a nimA-alc, bimA10 double mutant enter mitosis with kinetics indistinguishable from the nimA-alc, bimA1 or nimA-alc, bimA9 double mutants (Fig 6) or the wild-type control (data not shown). Similar results were obtained for double mutants containing bimA10 in combination with the ts nimA5 allele (data not shown). Thus, each mutant is severely defective for the G2 checkpoint function of bimAAPC3.

Mutations in DNA damage checkpoint genes allow septation to proceed in bimA9 and bimA10 germlings:
Given that the APC/C is required for the metaphase-to-anaphase and M-to-G1 transitions, we expected to observe chromosome segregation abnormalities and elevated %CMIs in the bimA1, bimA9, and bimA10 strains. However, the aseptate phenotype of bimA9 and bimA10 (HARRIS et al. 1994 Down; see below) implied a novel role for the APC/C in septation control. Alternatively, errors in DNA metabolism caused by the mutations may lead to the observed septation block via the A. nidulans DNA damage checkpoint.

HARRIS and KRAUS 1998 Down have shown that components of the DNA damage checkpoint in A. nidulans, such as uvsB+ and uvsD+ (YE et al. 1997A Down), delay or prevent septum formation when DNA metabolism is perturbed. It was recently discovered that uvsB+ is a homologue of the MEC1/rad3+ PI-3-related kinases involved in the DNA damage checkpoint in yeasts (SEATON et al. 1992 Down; KATO and OGAWA 1994 Down; S. HARRIS, personal communication). Thus, the failure of bimA9 and bimA10 mutants to septate could be explained by the accumulation of DNA metabolism errors.

To test if the failure of bimA9 and bimA10 germlings to septate was a result of the activity of the DNA damage checkpoint, uvsB110 and uvsD153 mutations were crossed into bimA9 and bimA10 strains. We found that the uvs mutations partially relieved the septation defects at the restrictive temperature (Fig 7A and Fig B), consistent with an indirect effect of bimA9 and bimA10 on septation.

The DNA damage checkpoint is critical for cell survival after genomic insult; mutations that cause DNA damage commonly produce synthetic phenotypes in DNA damage checkpoint-deficient backgrounds. We observed that the bimA10, uvsB110 and bimA10, uvsD153 double mutants displayed pronounced growth defects at 30°, while the bimA9, uvsB110 and bimA9, uvsD153 double mutants displayed growth defects at 37° (Fig 7C). In addition to growth defects, the uvsB110 and uvsD153 alleles also enhanced the mitotic defects of the bimA9 and bimA10 strains (data not shown). Taken together, our results suggest that bimA9 and bimA10 mutants accumulate errors in DNA metabolism that activate the DNA damage checkpoint blocking septation.

bimA10 is hypersensitive to hydroxyurea:
Hypersensitivity to HU is associated with defects in cell-cycle processes and checkpoint regulation (YE et al. 1996 Down). We observed that both bimA1 and bimA9 alleles conferred slight sensitivities to low concentrations of HU (8 mM) at permissive temperature (Fig 8A). The sensitivity of bimA10 mutants was more striking (Fig 8A). HU sensitivity cosegregated with the bimA ts phenotypes and was complemented with the bimAAPC3 cDNA (data not shown), presumably through gene conversion.



View larger version (54K):
In this window
In a new window
Download PPT slide
 
Figure 8. bimA10 hypersensitivity to hydroxyurea is not caused by a defective S-phase checkpoint. (A) bimA10 hypersensitivity to hydroxyurea. Conidia from strains A28 (bimA+), PM156 (bimA1), MLC1-19 (bimA9), and ATW41 (bimA10) were spread onto CM plates containing 8 mM HU. Pictures were taken after 6 days of growth at 30°. The differential shading among colonies is caused by the different color markers in each strain, where WT is green, bimA1 is white, and bimA9 is yellow. Furthermore, conidiation of bimA1 and bimA9 colonies is reduced by growth on these media. (B) bimA10 delays chromatin condensation in the presence of HU. Conidia of A852 (bimA+/bimA+) and ATW53 (bimA10/bimA10) were germinated at 42° for various lengths of time in the presence or absence of 10 mM HU. Samples were fixed and stained with Hoechst 33258. At each time point, the percentage of germlings (N = 100) with a condensed nucleus was determined (%CMI). Benomyl (5 µg/ml) was added to the cultures to trap nuclei in mitosis to better determine the rate at which nuclei entered mitosis (YE et al. 1996 Down). Similar results were obtained at the permissive temperature of 30° (data not shown).

Hypersensitivity to HU is characteristic of S-phase checkpoint mutants of A. nidulans (YE et al. 1996 Down). We tested whether the HU hypersensitivity of bimA10 was a checkpoint defect by examining if mitosis was delayed in the presence of HU. We found that like the wild type, bimA10 mutants were able to delay both chromatin condensation (Fig 8B) and spindle assembly (data not shown) when treated with 10 mM HU. In addition, we did not observe increased mitotic recombination in bimA10 mutants after HU treatment (data not shown), suggesting that the ability to recover from a slow S phase was normal (STEWART et al. 1997 Down). We conclude that bimA10-associated HU hypersensitivity is not due to a faulty S-phase checkpoint, and may instead be the result of a defect associated with S-phase regulation.


*  DISCUSSION
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

We found that sepI1 is an allele of bimAAPC3 (and so, was renamed bimA10), possibly implicating BIMAAPC3 in the control of septation. Septation defects and hypomorphic phenotypes are associated with both bimA9 and bimA10. The results shown here demonstrate that the sep phenotype of bimA9 and bimA10 is at least partially caused by the activation of a DNA damage checkpoint, suggesting that mutations in bimAAPC3 can lead to errors in DNA metabolism. This idea is supported by our observations that bimA9 and bimA10 strains have morphologically abnormal nuclei, chromosome segregation defects, synthetic phenotypes with mutations in the DNA damage checkpoint genes uvsBMEC1/rad3 or uvsD+, and enhanced sensitivity to hydroxyurea.

The molecular basis of bimAAPC3 alleles:
Sequencing of bimA1 and bimA9 revealed that each allele contained a single amino acid substitution in an important TPR residue (Fig 1: bimA1, G to C in TPR 7; bimA9, L to S in TPR 0). TPR units are known to mediate protein-protein interactions (GOEBL and YANAGIDA 1991 Down; SIKORSKI et al. 1991 Down; LAMB et al. 1995 Down). Crystallographic studies of the TPR protein PP5 and modeling of Nuc2 protein structure support the protein-protein interaction model and point out that adjacent TPR units pack together in an arrangement of antiparallel {alpha} helices that make a potential binding site for target proteins (HIRANO et al. 1990 Down; DAS et al. 1998 Down). The bimA1 and bimA9 mutations may destabilize protein-protein interactions within BIMAAPC3, between BIMAAPC3 and other APC/C components, or between BIMAAPC3 and target proteins. A bimA1-like substitution in TPR 6 of the bimAAPC3 homologue, CDC27 of S. cerevisiae, destabilizes the interaction between Cdc27p and another APC/C component, Cdc23p (LAMB et al. 1994 Down). Perhaps the difference in the bimA1 and bimA9 phenotypes results from the interaction of TPRs 0 and 7 with different proteins.

The intron splicing error of bimA10 alters BIMAAPC3 considerably by destroying the end of TPR 9, adding 40 C-terminal residues, and changing the charge of the C terminus from acidic to basic (Fig 1). Because the splicing error is not temperature sensitive, this allele most likely encodes a thermosensitive polypeptide. The similarity between bimA9 and bimA10 mutants may reflect a similar function for TPRs 0 and 9.

bimA mutants have defects that activate a DNA damage checkpoint blocking septation:
Although bimA1, bimA9, and bimA10 had quantitatively different effects on cell growth and nuclear division, all three bimA alleles conferred defects in mitotic progression, chromosome segregation, and the G2 checkpoint preventing mitosis in response to deficient NIMA. Similar phenotypes are associated with mutations in the APC/C subunits BIMEAPC1 and BIMHAPC6 (LIES et al. 1998 Down; P. M. MIRABITO, unpublished results), making it likely that the three bimA mutations affect one or more functions of the APC/C itself, rather than some unknown, APC/C-independent functions of BIMAAPC3.

The septation phenotype of bimA9 and bimA10 mutants initially suggested a role for the APC/C in regulating septation in A. nidulans. This was a particularly attractive hypothesis, as the phenotypes from loss-of-function mutations and overexpression of the Schizosaccharomyces pombe bimAAPC3 homologue nuc2+ suggested that nuc2+ may be a negative regulator of septation (HIRANO et al. 1988 Down; KUMADA et al. 1995 Down). Our results do not, however, support a direct role for bimAAPC3 as either a positive or negative regulator of septation. Instead, we find that the septation defect of bimA9 and bimA10 mutants was largely dependent on a DNA damage checkpoint that blocks septation. This checkpoint has previously been shown to block septation in the presence of low levels of genotoxic agents and in the sepB3 and sepJ1 mutants (HARRIS and KRAUS 1998 Down). The fact that not all bimA9 and bimA10 cells formed septa upon inactivation of the DNA damage checkpoint may result from the synthetic interactions among these bimAAPC3 and uvs alleles (see Fig 7C). It is unlikely that chromosome missegregation alone is the cause of the septation block, because aneuploid A. nidulans strains can septate (WOLKOW et al. 1996 Down). We suggest that bimA9 and bimA10 mutants accumulate errors in DNA metabolism and that their septation defect is a secondary consequence of these errors.

Suggestions for how bimAAPC3 mutants give rise to DNA metabolism errors:
One clue to the mechanism may be provided by the extreme HU-sensitive phenotype of bimA10 mutants (Fig 8A). This HU hypersensitivity is not caused by defects in the S-phase checkpoint controlling entry into mitosis (Fig 8B) or in the pathway controlling recovery from S-phase perturbation (data not shown), suggesting that the APC/C may be more intimately involved in DNA replication. Additional evidence for APC/C involvement in replication comes from observations that mutations in the APC/C genes CDC27 and CDC16 cause uncontrolled replication in S. cerevisiae (HEICHMAN and ROBERTS 1996 Down, HEICHMAN and ROBERTS 1998 Down). Perhaps inappropriate initiation of replication occurs at some level in bimA9 and bimA10 mutants, leading to partially overreplicated chromosomes that may activate the DNA damage checkpoint blocking septation.

YE et al. 1998 Down recently suggested a novel role for bimAAPC3 in mitotic regulation. Rapid temperature shift with the bimA1 strain promoted repeating cell-cycle oscillations (chromosome condensation and decondensation, and activation and inactivation of mitotic kinases) devoid of intermittent nuclear divisions. The authors suggest that bimAAPC3 is part of a "cell-cycle clock mechanism" that coordinates APC/C function with the activity of mitotic cell-cycle regulators (p34nimx/cdc2, NIMA). In this way, the bimA1 mutation may cause mitotic delay by desensitizing the APC/C to activation by its mitotic substrates (cyclin B, Polo, NIMA). The complete inability of bimA1 to regulate APC/C dependent-proteolysis of an anaphase inhibitor(s) may account for the lack of nuclear division in the mutant.

To extend this hypothesis, bimA9 and bimA10 may differ from bimA1 in the ability to promote the metaphase-to-anaphase transition, thus allowing some extent of nuclear division to occur. The asynchronous nuclear divisions and chromosome segregation abnormalities of bimA9 and bimA10 cells are possibly caused by inefficient APC/C-dependent proteolysis of an anaphase inhibitor(s). Perhaps this problem leads to the production of daughter nuclei joined by anaphase bridges of chromatin (see Fig 4E and Fig F). We envision that the production of disorganized chromatin masses with multiple spindles occurs after these nondisjoined daughter nuclei enter the next round of mitosis, similar to that seen in bimBESP1 mutants (MAY et al. 1992 Down). Alternatively, this observation may suggest that bimAAPC3 helps coordinate spindle pole body duplication with the nuclear division cycle.


*  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Dr. John Clutterbuck for providing pDHG25 and Dr. Steve Harris for providing uvs strains, communicating results prior to publication, and for many insightful suggestions. We also thank Dr. John Doonan and members of the Mirabito and Hamer labs for helpful discussions, as well as the Genetics reviewers for their constructive criticisms. This work was funded by two National Institutes of Health grants awarded to J.E.H. and P.M.M.

Manuscript received July 2, 1999; Accepted for publication August 25, 1999.


*  LITERATURE CITED
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

AMON, A., S. IRNIGER, and K. NASMYTH, 1994  Closing the cell cycle circle in yeast: G2 cyclin proteolysis initiated at mitosis persists until the activation of G1 cyclins in the next cycle. Cell 77:1037-1050[Medline].

BERGEN, L. G. and N. R. MORRIS, 1983  Kinetics of the nuclear division cycle of Aspergillus nidulans.. J. Bacteriol. 156:155-160[Abstract/Free Full Text].

BRANDEIS, M. and T. HUNT, 1996  The proteolysis of mitotic cyclins in mammalian cells persists from the end of mitosis until the onset of S phase. EMBO J. 15:5280-5289[Medline].

BRODY, H., J. GRIFFITH, A. J. CUTICCHIA, J. ARNOLD, and W. E. TIMBERLAKE, 1991  Chromosome-specific recombinant DNA libraries from the fungus Aspergillus nidulans.. Nucleic Acids Res. 19:3105-3109[Abstract/Free Full Text].

BUNZ, F., A. DUTRIAUX, C. LENGAUER, T. WALDMAN, and S. ZHOU et al., 1998  Requirement for p53 and p21 to sustain G2 arrest after DNA damage. Science 282:1497-1501[Abstract/Free Full Text].

CLUTTERBUCK, A. J., 1970  Synchronous nuclear division and septation in Aspergillus nidulans.. J. Gen. Microbiol. 60:133-135[Medline].

COHEN-FIX, O. and D. KOSHLAND, 1997  The anaphase inhibitor of S. cerevisiae Pds1p is a target of the DNA damage checkpoint pathway. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94:14361-14366[Abstract/Free Full Text].

DAS, A., P. COHEN, and D. BARFORD, 1998  The structure of the tetratricopeptide repeats of protein phosphatase 5: implications for TPR-mediated protein-protein interactions. EMBO J. 17:1192-1199[Medline].

DOBINSON, K., R. HARRIS, and J. HAMER, 1993  Grasshopper: a retrotransposon of Magnaporthe grisea.. Mol. Plant Microbiol. Interact. 6:114-126.

FANG, G., H. YU, and M. W. KIRSCHNER, 1998  The checkpoint protein MAD2 and the mitotic regulator CDC20 form a ternary complex with the anaphase-promoting complex to control anaphase initiation. Genes Dev. 12:1871-1883[Abstract/Free Full Text].

FIDDY, C. and A. P. J. TRINCI, 1976  Mitosis, septation, branching and the duplication cycle in Aspergillus nidulans.. J. Gen. Microbiol. 97:169-194[Medline].

FISHKIND, D. and Y. WANG, 1995  New horizons for cytokinesis. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 7:23-31[Medline].

GOEBL, M. and M. YANAGIDA, 1991  The TPR snap helix: a novel protein repeat motif from mitosis to transcription. Trends Biochem. Sci. 16:173-177[Medline].

GOULD, K. and V. SIMANIS, 1997  The control of septum formation in fission yeast. Genes Dev. 11:2939-2951[Free Full Text].

HARRIS, S. and J. E. HAMER, 1995  sepB: an Aspergillus nidulans gene involved in chromosome segregation and the initiation of cytokinesis. EMBO J. 14:5244-5257[Medline].

HARRIS, S. D. and P. R. KRAUS, 1998  Regulation of septum formation in Aspergillus nidulans by a DNA damage checkpoint pathway. Genetics 148:1055-1067[Abstract/Free Full Text].

HARRIS, S. D., J. L. MORRELL, and J. E. HAMER, 1994  Identification and characterization of Aspergillus nidulans mutants defective in cytokinesis. Genetics 136:517-532[Abstract].

HE, X., T. PATTERSON, and S. SAZER, 1997  The S. pombe spindle checkpoint protein mad2p blocks anaphase and genetically interacts with the anaphase-promoting complex. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94:7965-7970[Abstract/Free Full Text].

HEICHMAN, K. and J. M. ROBERTS, 1996  The yeast CDC16 and CDC27 genes restrict DNA replication to once per cell cycle. Cell 85:39-48[Medline].

HEICHMAN, K. and J. M. ROBERTS, 1998  CDC16 controls initiation at chromosome replication origins. Mol. Cell 3:457-463.

HERSHKO, A., D. GANOTH, V. SUDAKIN, A. DAHAN, and L. COHEN et al., 1994  Components of a system that ligates cyclin to ubiquitin and their regulation by the protein kinase cdc2.. J. Biol. Chem. 269:4940-4946[Abstract/Free Full Text].

HIRANO, T., Y. HIRAOKA, and M. YANAGIDA, 1988  A temperature-sensitive mutation of the S. pombe gene nuc2+ that encodes a nuclear scaffold-like protein blocks spindle elongation in mitotic anaphase. J. Cell Biol. 106:1171-1183[Abstract/Free Full Text].

HIRANO, T., N. KINOSHITA, K. MORIKAWA, and M. YANAGIDA, 1990  Snap helix with knob and hole: essential repeats in S. pombe nuclear protein nuc2. Cell 60:319-328[Medline].

IRNIGER, S. and K. NASMYTH, 1997  The anaphase-promoting complex is required in G1 arrested yeast cells to inhibit B-type cyclin accumulation and to prevent uncontrolled entry into S-phase. J. Cell Sci. 110:1523-1531[Abstract].

JUNG, M. K., G. MAY, and B. OAKLEY, 1998  Mitosis in wild-type and B-tubulin mutant strains of A. nidulans.. Fungal Genet. Biol. 24:146-160.

KAFER, E., 1977  Meiotic and mitotic recombination in Aspergillus and its chromosomal aberrations. Adv. Genet. 19:33-131[Medline].

KAFER, E. and A. UPSHALL, 1973  The phenotypes of eight disomics and trisomics of Aspergillus nidulans.. J. Hered. 64:35-38[Free Full Text].

KALLIO, M., J. WEINSTEIN, J. R. DAUM, D. J. BURKE, and G. J. GORBSKY, 1998  Mammalian p55CDC mediates association of the spindle checkpoint protein Mad2 with the cyclosome/anaphase-promoting complex, and is involved in regulating anaphase onset and late mitotic events. J. Cell Biol. 141:1393-1406[Abstract/Free Full Text].

KATO, R. and H. OGAWA, 1994  An essential gene, ESR1, is required for mitotic cell growth, DNA repair and meiotic recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. Nucleic Acids Res. 22:3104-3112[Abstract/Free Full Text].

KING, R., R. DESHAIES, J. PETERS, and M. KIRSCHNER, 1996  How proteolysis drives the cell cycle. Science 274:1652-1659[Abstract/Free Full Text].

KUMADA, K., S. SU, M. YANAGIDA, and T. TODA, 1995  Fission yeast TPR-family protein nuc2 is required for G1-arrest upon nitrogen starvation and is an inhibitor of septum formation. J. Cell Sci. 108:895-905[Abstract].

LAMB, J., S. TUGENDREICH, and P. HIETER, 1995  Tetratricopeptide repeat interactions: to TPR or not to TPR? Trends Biochem. Sci. 20:257-259[Medline].

LAMB, J., W. MICHAUD, R. SIKORSKI, and P. HIETER, 1994  Cdc16p, Cdc23p and Cdc27p form a complex essential for mitosis. EMBO J. 13:4321-4328[Medline].

LI, Y., C. GORBEA, D. MAHAFFEY, M. RECHSTEINER, and R. BENEZRA, 1997  MAD2 associates with the cyclosome/anaphase-promoting complex and inhibits its activity. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94:12431-12436[Abstract/Free Full Text].

LIES, C., J. CHENG, S. JAMES, N. MORRIS, and M. O'CONNELL et al., 1998  BIMAAPC3, a component of the A. nidulans anaphase promoting complex/cyclosome, is required for a G2 checkpoint blocking entry into mitosis in the absence of NIMA function. J. Cell Sci. 111:1453-1465[Abstract].

MAY, G., C. MCGOLDRICK, C. HOLT, and S. DENISON, 1992  The bimB3 mutation of Aspergillus nidulans uncouples DNA replication from the completion of mitosis. J. Biol. Chem. 267:15737-15743[Abstract/Free Full Text].

MOMANY, M. and J. E. HAMER, 1997  The relationship of actin, microtubules, and crosswall synthesis during septation in Aspergillus nidulans.. Cell Motil. Cytoskelet. 38:373-384[Medline].

MORRIS, N. R., 1976  Mitotic mutants of Aspergillus nidulans.. Genet. Res. 26:237-254.

OAKLEY, B., and S. OSMANI, 1993 Cell-Cycle Analysis Using the Filamentous Fungus Aspergillus nidulans. IRL Press, Oxford.

O'DONNELL, K. L., A. H. OSMANI, S. A. OSMANI, and N. R. MORRIS, 1991  bimA encodes a member of the tetratricopeptide repeat family of proteins and is required for the completion of mitosis in Aspergillus nidulans.. J. Cell Sci. 99:711-719[Abstract].

OSMANI, S. A. and X. S. YE, 1997  Targets of checkpoints controlling mitosis: lessons from lower eukaryotes. Trends Cell Biol. 7:283-288.

PETERS, J. M., R. W. KING, C. HOOG, and M. KIRSHNER, 1996  Identification of BIME as a subunit of the anaphase-promoting complex. Science 274:1199-1201[Abstract/Free Full Text].

RUDNER, A. and A. MURRAY, 1996  The spindle assembly checkpoint. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 8:773-780[Medline].

SAMBROOK, J., E. FRITSCH and T. MANIATIS, 1989 Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, Ed. 2. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, NY.

SATTERWHITE, L. L. and T. D. POLLARD, 1992  Cytokinesis. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 4:43-52[Medline].

SATTERWHITE, L. L., M. J. LOHKA, K. L. WILSON, T. Y. SCHERSON, and L. J. CISEK et al., 1992  Phosphorylation of mysoin-II regulatory light chain by cyclin-p34cdc2: a mechanism for the timing of cytokinesis. J. Cell Biol. 118:595-605[Abstract/Free Full Text].

SEATON, B., J. YUCEL, P. SUNNERHAGEN, and S. SUBRAMANI, 1992  Isolation and characterization of the S. pombe rad3 gene involved in the DNA damage and DNA synthesis checkpoints. Gene 119:83-89[Medline].

SIKORSKI, R., M. BOGUSKI, M. GOEBL, and P. HIETER, 1990  A repeating amino acid motif in CDC23 defines a family of proteins and a new relationship among genes required for mitosis and RNA synthesis. Cell 60:307-317[Medline].

SIKORSKI, R., W. MICHAUD, J. WOOTTON, M. BOGUSKI, and C. CONNELLY ET AL, 1991  TPR proteins as essential components of the yeast cell cycle. Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol. 56:663-673[Abstract/Free Full Text].

STEWART, E., C. CHAPMAN, F. AL-KHODAIRY, A. CARR, and T. ENOCH, 1997  rqh1+, a fission yeast gene related to the Bloom's and Werner's syndrome genes, is required for reversible S-phase arrest. EMBO J. 16:2682-2692[Medline].

SUELMANN, R., N. SIEVERS, and R. FISCHER, 1997  Nuclear traffic in fungal hyphae: in vivo study of nuclear migration and positioning in Aspergillus nidulans.. Mol. Microbiol. 25:757-769[Medline].

TIMBERLAKE, W. E., 1990  Molecular genetics of Aspergillus development. Annu. Rev. Genet. 24:5-36[Medline].

TOWNSLEY, F. and J. RUDERMAN, 1998  Proteolytic ratchets that control progression through mitosis. Trends Cell Biol. 8:238-244[Medline].

TUGENDREICH, S., M. BOGUSKI, M. SELDIN, and P. HIETER, 1993  Linking yeast genetics to mammalian genomes: identification and mapping of the human homologue of CDC27 via the expressed sequence tag (EST) data base. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 90:10031-10035[Abstract/Free Full Text].

WHEATLEY, S. P., E. H. HINCHCLIFFE, M. GLOTZER, A. A. HYMAN, and G. SLUDER et al., 1997  CDK1 inactivation regulates anaphase spindle dynamics and cytokinesis in vivo.. J. Cell Biol. 138:385-393[Abstract/Free Full Text].

WOLKOW, T. D., S. D. HARRIS, and J. E. HAMER, 1996  Cytokinesis in Aspergillus nidulans is controlled by cell size, nuclear positioning and mitosis. J. Cell Sci. 109:2179-2188[Abstract].

YE, X., R. R. FINCHER, A. TANG, K. O'DONNELL, and S. A. OSMANI, 1996  Two S-phase checkpoint systems, one involving the function of both BIME and Tyr15 phosphorylation of p34cdc2, inhibit NIMA and prevent premature mitosis. EMBO J. 15:3599-3610[Medline].

YE, X., R. R. FINCHER, A. TANG, and S. A. OSMANI, 1997a  The G2/M DNA damage checkpoint inhibits mitosis through Try15 phosphorylation of p34cdc2 in A. nidulans.. EMBO J. 16:182-192[Medline].

YE, X., R. FINCHER, A. TANG, K. MCNEAL, and S. GYGAX et al., 1997b  Proteolysis and tyrosine phosphorylation of p34/cyclin B. J. Biol. Chem. 272:33384-33393[Abstract/Free Full Text].

YE, X., R. R. FINCHER, A. TANG, A. OSMANI, and S. A. OSMANI, 1998  Regulation of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome by bimAAPC3 and proteolysis of NIMA. Mol. Biol. Cell 9:3019-3030[Abstract/Free Full Text].




This article has been cited by other articles: