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In budding yeast, the eukaryotic initiator protein ORC (origin recognition complex) binds to a bipartite sequence consisting of an 11 bp ACS element and an adjacent B1 element. However, the genome contains many more matches to this consensus than actually bind ORC or function as origins in vivo. Although ORC-dependent loading of the replicative MCM helicase at origins is enhanced by a distal B2 element, less is known about this element. Here, we analyzed four highly active origins (ARS309, ARS319, ARS606 and ARS607) by linker scanning mutagenesis and found that sequences adjacent to the ACS contributed substantially to origin activity and ORC binding. Using the sequences of four additional B2 elements we generated a B2 multiple sequence alignment and identified a shared, degenerate 8 bp sequence that was enriched within 228 known origins. In addition, our high-resolution analysis revealed that not all origins exist within nucleosome free regions: a class of Sir2-regulated origins has a stably positioned nucleosome overlapping or near B2. This study illustrates the conserved yet flexible nature of yeast origin architecture to promote ORC binding and origin activity, and helps explain why a strong match to the ORC binding site is insufficient to identify origins within the genome.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkr301 | DOI Listing |
Acta Naturae
January 2025
Institute of Gene Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, 119334 Russia.
In our previous studies, we demonstrated that the Drosophila zinc finger protein Aef1 interacts with the SAGA DUB module. The Aef1 binding sites colocalize with the SAGA histone acetyltransferase complex and the dSWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex, as well as the origin recognition complex (ORC). Aef1 predominantly localizes with the promoters of active genes (55% of all sites) and can be involved in transcriptional regulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
July 2025
Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USA.
Mono-methylation of histone H4 lysine 20 (H4K20me1) regulates DNA replication, cell cycle progression and DNA damage repair. How exactly H4K20me1 regulates these biological processes remains unclear. Here, we report that an evolutionarily conserved tandem Tudor domain (TTD) in BAHCC1 (BAHCC1) selectively reads H4K20me1 for facilitating replication origin activation and DNA replication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Struct Mol Biol
June 2025
Chromosome Replication Laboratory, The Francis Crick Institute, London, UK.
Eukaryotic DNA replication initiates from genomic loci known as origins. At budding yeast origins like ARS1, a double hexamer (DH) of the MCM replicative helicase is assembled by origin recognition complex (ORC), Cdc6 and Cdt1 by sequential hexamer loading from two opposed ORC binding sites. Cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibits DH assembly, which prevents re-replication by restricting helicase loading to the G1 phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Rep
June 2025
Department of Genetics, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35233, USA. Electronic address:
We report a multi-omics study in a human cell line with mutations in three subunits of origin-recognition complex (ORC). Although the ORC subunits should bind DNA as part of a common six-subunit ORC, there are thousands of sites in the genome where one subunit binds but not another. DNA-bound ORC2 compacts chromatin and attracts repressive histone marks to focal areas of the genome, but ORC2 also activates chromatin at many sites and protects the genes from repressive marks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
May 2025
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
During origin licensing, the origin recognition complex (ORC) loads two Mcm2-7 helicases onto DNA in a head-to-head conformation, establishing the foundation for subsequent bidirectional replication. Single-molecule experiments support a helicase-loading model in which one ORC loads both Mcm2-7 helicases at origins. For this to occur, ORC must release from its initial Mcm2-7 and DNA binding sites, flip over the helicase, and bind the opposite end of the Mcm2-7 complex and adjacent DNA to form the MO complex.
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