Dephosphorylation of γH2A by Glc7/Protein Phosphatase 1 Promotes Recovery from Inhibition of DNA Replication

2010 
Replication fork stalling caused by deoxynucleotide depletion triggers Rad53 phosphorylation and subsequent checkpoint activation, which in turn play a crucial role in maintaining functional DNA replication forks. How cells regulate checkpoint deactivation after inhibition of DNA replication is poorly understood. Here, we show that the budding yeast protein phosphatase Glc7/protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) promotes disappearance of phosphorylated Rad53 and recovery from replication fork stalling caused by the deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) synthesis inhibitor hydroxyurea (HU). Glc7 is also required for recovery from a double-strand break-induced checkpoint, while it is dispensable for checkpoint inactivation during methylmethane sulfonate exposure, which instead requires the protein phosphatases Pph3, Ptc2, and Ptc3. Furthermore, Glc7 counteracts in vivo histone H2A phosphorylation on serine 129 (γH2A) and dephosphorylates γH2A in vitro. Finally, the replication recovery defects of HU-treated glc7 mutants are partially rescued by Rad53 inactivation or lack of γH2A formation, and the latter also counteracts hyperphosphorylated Rad53 accumulation. We therefore propose that Glc7 activity promotes recovery from replication fork stalling caused by dNTP depletion and that γH2A dephosphorylation is a critical Glc7 function in this process.
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