The yeast TEM1 gene, which encodes a GTP-binding protein, is involved in termination of M phase.
Open Access
- 1 November 1994
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 14 (11) , 7476-7482
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.14.11.7476
Abstract
LTE1 belongs to the CDC25 family that encodes a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for GTP-binding proteins of the ras family. Previously we have shown that LTE1 is essential for termination of M phase at low temperatures. We have identified TEM1 as a gene that, when present on a multicopy plasmid, suppresses the cold-sensitive phenotype of lte1. Sequence analysis of TEM1 and GTP-binding analysis of the gene product revealed that TEM1 encodes a novel low-molecular-weight GTP-binding protein. The defect of TEM1 was lethal, and the tem1-defective cells were arrested at telophase with high H1-kinase activity under restrictive conditions, indicating that TEM1 is required to exit from M phase. The defect of TEM1 was suppressed by a high dose of CDC15, which encodes a protein kinase homologous to mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinases. The genetic interaction among LTE1, TEM1, and CDC15 indicates that they cooperatively play an essential role for termination of M phase.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Normal and oncogenic p21ras proteins bind to the amino-terminal regulatory domain of c-Raf-1Nature, 1993
- The cell-cycle-regulated budding yeast gene DBF2, encoding a putative protein kinase, has a homologue that is not under cell-cycle controlGene, 1991
- The GTPase superfamily: conserved structure and molecular mechanismNature, 1991
- Universal control mechanism regulating onset of M-phaseNature, 1990
- Regulation of p34cdc2 protein kinase during mitosisCell, 1989
- New yeast-Escherichia coli shuttle vectors constructed with in vitro mutagenized yeast genes lacking six-base pair restriction sitesGene, 1988
- Primer-Directed Enzymatic Amplification of DNA with a Thermostable DNA PolymeraseScience, 1988
- ras GENESAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1987
- Genes in S. cerevisiae encoding proteins with domains homologous to the mammalian ras proteinsCell, 1984
- Two differentially regulated mRNAs with different 5′ ends encode secreted and intracellular forms of yeast invertaseCell, 1982