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Mol. Cell. Biol., 02 1996, 677-684, Vol 16, No. 2
JA Prendergast, C Ptak, D Kornitzer, CN Steussy, R Hodgins, M Goebl and MJ Ellison
The Cdc34 (Ubc3) ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme from Saccharomyces cerevisiae
plays an essential role in the progression of cells from the G1 to S phase
of the cell division cycle. Using a high-copy suppression strategy, we have
identified a yeast gene (UBS1) whose elevated expression suppresses the
conditional cell cycle defects associated with cdc34 mutations. The UBS1
gene encodes a 32.2-kDa protein of previously unknown function and is
identical in sequence to a genomic open reading frame on chromosome II
(GenBank accession number Z36034). Several lines of evidence described here
indicate that Ubs1 functions as a general positive regulator of Cdc34
activity. First, overexpression of UBS1 suppresses not only the cell
proliferation and morphological defects associated with cdc34 mutants but
also the inability of cdc34 mutant cells to degrade the general amino acid
biosynthesis transcriptional regulator, Gcn4. Second, deletion of the UBS1
gene profoundly accentuates the cell cycle defect when placed in
combination with a cdc34 temperature-sensitive allele. Finally, a
comparison of the Ubs1 and Cdc34 polypeptide sequences reveals two
noncontiguous regions of similarity, which, when projected onto the
three-dimensional structure of a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme, define a
single region situated on its surface. While cdc34 mutations corresponding
to substitutions outside this region are suppressed by UBS1 overexpression,
Ubs1 fails to suppress amino acid substitutions made within this region.
Taken together with other findings, the allele specificity exhibited by
UBS1 expression suggests that Ubs1 regulates Cdc34 by interaction or
modification.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Identification of a positive regulator of the cell cycle ubiquitin- conjugating enzyme Cdc34 (Ubc3)
Department of Biochemistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
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