Eco1-Dependent Cohesin Acetylation During Establishment of Sister Chromatid Cohesion

Tom Rolef Ben-Shahar(The Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn), Sebastian Heeger(The Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn), Chris Lehane(The Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn), Philip East(The Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn), Helen R. Flynn(The Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn), Mark Skehel(The Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn), Frank Uhlmann(The Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn)
Science
July 24, 2008
Cited by 533

Abstract

Replicated chromosomes are held together by the chromosomal cohesin complex from the time of their synthesis in S phase onward. This requires the replication fork-associated acetyl transferase Eco1, but Eco1's mechanism of action is not known. We identified spontaneous suppressors of the thermosensitive eco1-1 allele in budding yeast. An acetylation-mimicking mutation of a conserved lysine in cohesin's Smc3 subunit makes Eco1 dispensable for cell growth, and we show that Smc3 is acetylated in an Eco1-dependent manner during DNA replication to promote sister chromatid cohesion. A second set of eco1-1 suppressors inactivate the budding yeast ortholog of the cohesin destabilizer Wapl. Our results indicate that Eco1 modifies cohesin to stabilize sister chromatid cohesion in parallel with a cohesion establishment reaction that is in principle Eco1-independent.


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