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Roles of the Tetrahymena thermophila type I element binding factor, TIF1, in DNA replication and genome stability

The Tetrahymena thermophila rDNA minichromosome has been used as a model
system for studying DNA replication. Previous studies have identified cis-acting
replication determinants within the rDNA origin and promoter region including the type I
element that is essential for replication initiation, fork progression and promoter activation.
TIF1 is a non-ORC single strand-binding protein that binds the type I element in vivo.
TIF1 binds opposing strands at the origin and promoter regions indicating that it may play
a role in selectively marking these regions. In this dissertation, I use gene disruption to
elucidate the role of TIF1 in replication. This work reveals that TIF1 represses rDNA
origin firing, and is required for proper macronuclear S phase progression and division.
Replication at the rDNA origin initiates precociously despite the observation that TIF1
mutants exhibit an elongated macronuclear S phase and a diminished rate of DNA
replication. The amitotic macronucleus also displays delayed and abnormal division even
though cells exit S phase with a wild-type macronuclear DNA content. Nuclear defects are
also evident in the diploid micronucleus as TIF1 mutants contain fewer micronuclear
chromosomes and are unable to pass genetic information to progeny. This defect is
progressive as clonal mutant lines exhibit micronuclear instability during subsequent
vegetative cell cycling. This work reveals that these macro- and micronuclear phenotypes may be the result of DNA damage as TIF1 mutants are hypersensitive to DNA damaging
agents. This suggests that TIF1 mutants may have defects in the DNA damage response
pathway. TIF1-deficient cells also incur DNA damage with no exogenous damaging
agents. I propose that micro- and macronuclear defects witnessed in TIF1 mutant cells
result from cells exiting S phase with compromised chromosomes due to the accumulation
of DNA damage. Furthermore, TIF1 appears to play a role in the prevention, recognition
or repair of DNA damage in addition to regulating rDNA replication and cell cycle
progression and division. Additionally, TIF1 plays an essential role in the faithful
propagation of both the macro- and micronuclear genomes.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/2591
Date01 November 2005
CreatorsMorrison, Tara Laine
ContributorsKapler, Geoffrey M.
PublisherTexas A&M University
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Format968302 bytes, electronic, application/pdf, born digital

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