Abstract
In the budding yeast,S. cerevisiae, two-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis techniques permit mapping of DNA replication origins to short stretches of DNA (±300 bp). In contrast, in mammalian cells andDrosophila, 2D gel techniques do not permit precise origin localization; the results have been interpreted to suggest that replication initiates in broad zones (several kbp or more). However, alternative techniques (replication timing, nascent strand polarity analysis, nascent strand size analysis) suggest that mammalian origins can be mapped to short DNA stretches, just likeS. cerevisiae origins. Because the fission yeast,Schizosaccharomyces pombe, resembles higher organisms in several ways to a greater extent than doesS. cerevisiae, we thought thatS. pombe replication origins might prove to resemble — and thus be helpful models for — animal cell origins. An attempt to test this possibility using 2D gel techiques resulted in identification of a replication origin near theura4 gene on chromosome III ofS. pombe. The 2D gel patterns produced by thisS. pombe origin indeed resemble the patterns produced by animal cell origins and show that theS. pombe origin cannot be precisely located. The data suggest an initiation zone of 3–5 kbp. Some aspects of the 2D gel patterns detected at theS. pombe origin cannot be explained by the rationale of initiation in broad zones, suggesting that future biochemical and genetic studies of this complex origin are likely to provide information useful in helping to understand the apparent conflict between the 2D gel mapping techniques and other mapping techniques at animal cell origins.
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Abbreviations
- 2D:
-
two-dimensional
- N/N:
-
neutral-neutral
- N/A:
-
neutral-alkaline
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Zhu, J., Brun, C., Kurooka, H. et al. Identification and characterization of a complex chromosomal replication origin inSchizosaccharomyces pombe . Chromosoma 102 (Suppl 1), S7–S16 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02451780
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02451780