Downey, M., Houlsworth, Rebecca, Maringele, Laura, Rollie, Adrienne, Brehme, Marc, Galicia, Sarah, Guillard, Sandrine, Partington, Melanie, Zubko, Mikhajlo K., Krogan, Nevan J., Emili, Andrew, Greenblatt, Jack F., Harrington, Lea, Lydall, David and Durocher, D. (2006) A genome-wide screen identifies the evolutionarily conserved KEOPS complex as a telomere regulator. Cell, 124 (6). pp. 1155-1168. ISSN 1097-4172
File not available for download.Abstract
Telomere capping is the essential function of telomeres. To identify new genes involved in telomere capping, we carried out a genome-wide screen in Saccharomyces cerevisiae for suppressors of cdc13-1, an allele of the telomere-capping protein Cdc13. We report the identification of five novel suppressors, including the previously uncharacterized gene YML036W, which we name CGI121. Cgi121 is part of a conserved protein complex—the KEOPS complex—containing the protein kinase Bud32, the putative peptidase Kae1, and the uncharacterized protein Gon7. Deletion of CGI121 suppresses cdc13-1 via the dramatic reduction in ssDNA levels that accumulate in cdc13-1 cgi121 mutants. Deletion of BUD32 or other KEOPS components leads to short telomeres and a failure to add telomeres de novo to DNA double-strand breaks. Our results therefore indicate that the KEOPS complex promotes both telomere uncapping and telomere elongation.
Impact and Reach
Statistics
Additional statistics for this dataset are available via IRStats2.