Sw. Jang et al., Identification of Cdc6 protein domains involved in interaction with Mcm2 protein and Cdc4 protein in budding yeast cells, BIOCHEM J, 354, 2001, pp. 655-661
The Cdc6 protein (Cdc6p) has essential roles in regulating initiation of DN
A replication. Cdc6p, is recruited to origins of replication by the origin
recognition complex (ORC) late in mitosis; Cdc6p in turn recruits minichrom
osome maintenance (Mcm) proteins to form the pre-replicative complex. Cdc6p
is thought to interact with one or more Mcm proteins but this point has no
t yet been demonstrated. In the present study we observed that Cdc6p intera
cted significantly only with Mcm2p out of six Mcm proteins in yeast two-hyb
rid cells. Our results indicate that the interaction of Cdc6p with Mcm2p is
specific, although we cannot exclude the possibility that the interaction
might not he direct. In attempts to identify domains of Cdc6p important for
interaction with Mcm2p, we tested interactions of various deleted versions
of Cdc6p with Mcm2p and also with Cdc4p, which was previously known to int
eract with Cdc6p. The portion of Cdc6p from amino acid residues 51 to 394 w
as able to interact with Mcm2p. During the course of the studies we also di
scovered a previously undetected Cdc4p interaction domain between residues
51 and 394, Interestingly, when all six putative Cdc28 phosphorylation site
s in Cdc6p were changed to alanine, a 6-7-fold increase in binding to Mcm2p
was observed. This result suggests that unphosphorylated Cdc6p has higher
affinity than phosphorylated Cdc6p for Mcm2p: this might partly explain the
previous observation that Cdc6p failed to load Mcm proteins on replication
origins during S phase when the cyclin-dependent protein kinase was active
, thus helping to prevent the reinitiation of activated replicons.