Jh. Toyn et Lh. Johnston, SPO12 IS A LIMITING FACTOR THAT INTERACTS WITH THE CELL-CYCLE PROTEIN-KINASES DBF2 AND DBF20, WHICH ARE INVOLVED IN MITOTIC CHROMATID DISJUNCTION, Genetics, 135(4), 1993, pp. 963-971
The DBF2 and DBF20 genes of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae
encode a pair of structurally similar protein kinases. Although yeast
with either gene deleted is viable, deletion of both genes is lethal.
Thus, the Dbf2 land Dbf20 proteins are functional alternatives for an
essential activity. In contrast to deletions, four different mutant a
lleles of DBF2 are lethal. Thus, the presence of a nonfunctional Dbf2
protein, rather than the lack of function per se, is inhibitory. Here
we present genetic evidence that nonfunctional mutant Dbf2 protein blo
cks the function of Dbf20 protein by sequestering a common interacting
protein encoded by SPO12. Even a single extra copy of SPO12 is suffic
ient to suppress the dbf2 defect. Since SPO12 appears to encode a limi
ting factor, it may be a rate limiting cofactor that is involved in th
e regulation of the Dbf2 and Dbf20 protein kinases. A corollary to the
finding that one extra copy of SPO12 can suppress dbf2, is that the a
cquisition of an extra chromosome VIII, which carries the SPO12 locus,
will also suppress dbf2. Indeed, physical analysis of chromosome copy
number in dbf2 revertants able to grow at 37 degrees showed that the
frequency of chromosome VIII acquisition increased when cells were inc
ubated at the restrictive temperature, and reached a frequency of more
than 100-fold the amount in wild-type yeast. This suggested that the
dbf2 mutation was not only suppressed by an extra copy of chromosome V
III but also that the dbf2 mutation actually caused aberrant chromosom
al segregation. Conventional assays for chromosome loss confirmed this
proposal.