Yutaka Kanoh
Tokyo Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yutaka Kanoh.
Nature | 2003
Yuki Katou; Yutaka Kanoh; Masashige Bando; Hideki Noguchi; Hirokazu Tanaka; Toshihiko Ashikari; Katsunori Sugimoto; Katsuhiko Shirahige
The checkpoint regulatory mechanism has an important role in maintaining the integrity of the genome. This is particularly important in S phase of the cell cycle, when genomic DNA is most susceptible to various environmental hazards. When chemical agents damage DNA, activation of checkpoint signalling pathways results in a temporary cessation of DNA replication. A replication-pausing complex is believed to be created at the arrested forks to activate further checkpoint cascades, leading to repair of the damaged DNA. Thus, checkpoint factors are thought to act not only to arrest replication but also to maintain a stable replication complex at replication forks. However, the molecular mechanism coupling checkpoint regulation and replication arrest is unknown. Here we demonstrate that the checkpoint regulatory proteins Tof1 and Mrc1 interact directly with the DNA replication machinery in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. When hydroxyurea blocks chromosomal replication, this assembly forms a stable pausing structure that serves to anchor subsequent DNA repair events.
Genes & Development | 2012
Motoshi Hayano; Yutaka Kanoh; Seiji Matsumoto; Claire Renard-Guillet; Katsuhiko Shirahige; Hisao Masai
One of the long-standing questions in eukaryotic DNA replication is the mechanisms that determine where and when a particular segment of the genome is replicated. Cdc7/Hsk1 is a conserved kinase required for initiation of DNA replication and may affect the site selection and timing of origin firing. We identified rif1Δ, a null mutant of rif1(+), a conserved telomere-binding factor, as an efficient bypass mutant of fission yeast hsk1. Extensive deregulation of dormant origins over a wide range of the chromosomes occurs in rif1Δ in the presence or absence of hydroxyurea (HU). At the same time, many early-firing, efficient origins are suppressed or delayed in firing timing in rif1Δ. Rif1 binds not only to telomeres, but also to many specific locations on the arm segments that only partially overlap with the prereplicative complex assembly sites, although Rif1 tends to bind in the vicinity of the late/dormant origins activated in rif1Δ. The binding to the arm segments occurs through M to G1 phase in a manner independent of Taz1 and appears to be essential for the replication timing program during the normal cell cycle. Our data demonstrate that Rif1 is a critical determinant of the origin activation program on the fission yeast chromosomes.
The EMBO Journal | 2012
Satoshi Yamazaki; Aii Ishii; Yutaka Kanoh; Masako Oda; Yasumasa Nishito; Hisao Masai
DNA replication is spatially and temporally regulated during S‐phase. DNA replication timing is established in early‐G1‐phase at a point referred to as timing decision point. However, how the genome‐wide replication timing domains are established is unknown. Here, we show that Rif1 (Rap1‐interacting‐factor‐1), originally identified as a telomere‐binding factor in yeast, is a critical determinant of the replication timing programme in human cells. Depletion of Rif1 results in specific loss of mid‐S replication foci profiles, stimulation of initiation events in early‐S‐phase and changes in long‐range replication timing domain structures. Analyses of replication timing show replication of sequences normally replicating early is delayed, whereas that normally replicating late is advanced, suggesting that replication timing regulation is abrogated in the absence of Rif1. Rif1 tightly binds to nuclear‐insoluble structures at late‐M‐to‐early‐G1 and regulates chromatin‐loop sizes. Furthermore, Rif1 colocalizes specifically with the mid‐S replication foci. Thus, Rif1 establishes the mid‐S replication domains that are restrained from being activated at early‐S‐phase. Our results indicate that Rif1 plays crucial roles in determining the replication timing domain structures in human cells through regulating higher‐order chromatin architecture.
Molecular Cell | 2010
Daniele Fachinetti; Rodrigo Bermejo; Andrea Cocito; Simone Minardi; Yuki Katou; Yutaka Kanoh; Katsuhiko Shirahige; Anna Azvolinsky; Virginia A. Zakian; Marco Foiani
Chromosome replication initiates at multiple replicons and terminates when forks converge. In E. coli, the Tus-TER complex mediates polar fork converging at the terminator region, and aberrant termination events challenge chromosome integrity and segregation. Since in eukaryotes, termination is less characterized, we used budding yeast to identify the factors assisting fork fusion at replicating chromosomes. Using genomic and mechanistic studies, we have identified and characterized 71 chromosomal termination regions (TERs). TERs contain fork pausing elements that influence fork progression and merging. The Rrm3 DNA helicase assists fork progression across TERs, counteracting the accumulation of X-shaped structures. The Top2 DNA topoisomerase associates at TERs in S phase, and G2/M facilitates fork fusion and prevents DNA breaks and genome rearrangements at TERs. We propose that in eukaryotes, replication fork barriers, Rrm3, and Top2 coordinate replication fork progression and fusion at TERs, thus counteracting abnormal genomic transitions.
Molecular Cell | 2004
Hideki Takata; Yutaka Kanoh; Norio Gunge; Katsuhiko Shirahige; Akira Matsuura
The phosphoinositide (PI)-3-kinase-related kinase (PIKK) family proteins Tel1p and Mec1p have been implicated in the telomere integrity of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. However, the mechanism of PIKK-mediated telomere length control remains unclear. Here, we show that Tel1p and Mec1p are recruited to the telomeres at specific times in the cell cycle in a mutually exclusive manner. In particular, Mec1p interacts with the telomeres during late S phase and is associated preferentially with shortened telomeres. We propose a model in which telomere integrity is maintained by the reciprocal association of PIKKs, and Mec1p acts as a sensor for structural abnormalities in the telomeres. Our study suggests a mechanistic similarity between telomere length regulation and DNA double-strand break repair, both of which are achieved by the direct association of PIKKs.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2015
Yutaka Kanoh; Seiji Matsumoto; Rino Fukatsu; Naoko Kakusho; Nobuaki Kono; Claire Renard-Guillet; Koji Masuda; Keisuke Iida; Kazuo Nagasawa; Katsuhiko Shirahige; Hisao Masai
Rif1 regulates replication timing and repair of double-strand DNA breaks. Using a chromatin immunoprecipitation–sequencing method, we identified 35 high-affinity Rif1-binding sites in fission yeast chromosomes. Binding sites tended to be located near dormant origins and to contain at least two copies of a conserved motif, CNWWGTGGGGG. Base substitution within these motifs resulted in complete loss of Rif1 binding and in activation of late-firing or dormant origins located up to 50 kb away. We show that Rif1-binding sites adopt G quadruplex–like structures in vitro, in a manner dependent on the conserved sequence and on other G tracts, and that purified Rif1 preferentially binds to this structure. These results suggest that Rif1 recognizes and binds G quadruplex–like structures at selected intergenic regions, thus generating local chromatin structures that may exert long-range suppressive effects on origin firing.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2011
Motoshi Hayano; Yutaka Kanoh; Seiji Matsumoto; Hisao Masai
ABSTRACT How early- and late-firing origins are selected on eukaryotic chromosomes is largely unknown. Here, we show that Mrc1, a conserved factor required for stabilization of stalled replication forks, selectively binds to the early-firing origins in a manner independent of Cdc45 and Hsk1 kinase in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. In mrc1Δ cells (and in swi1Δ cells to some extent), efficiency of firing is stimulated, and its timing is advanced selectively at those origins that are normally bound by Mrc1. In contrast, the late or inefficient origins which are not bound by Mrc1 are not activated in mrc1Δ cells. The enhanced firing and precocious Cdc45 loading at Mrc1-bound early-firing origins are not observed in a checkpoint mutant of mrc1, suggesting that non-checkpoint function is involved in maintaining the normal program of early-firing origins. We propose that prefiring binding of Mrc1 is an important marker of early-firing origins which are precociously activated by the absence of this protein.
Cell Cycle | 2010
Seiji Matsumoto; Michie Shimmoto; Naoko Kakusho; Mika Yokoyama; Yutaka Kanoh; Motoshi Hayano; Paul Russell; Hisao Masai
In fission yeast, replication fork arrest activates the replication checkpoint effector kinase Cds1Chk2/Rad53 through the Rad3ATR/Mec1-Mrc1Claspin pathway. Hsk1, the Cdc7 homologue of fission yeast required for efficient initiation of DNA replication, is also required for Cds1 activation. Hsk1 kinase activity is required for induction and maintenance of Mrc1 hyperphosphorylation, which is induced by replication fork block and mediated by Rad3. Rad3 kinase activity does not change in an hsk1 temperature-sensitive mutant, and Hsk1 kinase activity is not affected by rad3 mutation. Hsk1 kinase vigorously phosphorylates Mrc1 in vitro, predominantly at non-SQ/TQ sites, but this phosphorylation does not seem to affect the Rad3 action on Mrc1. Interestingly, the replication stress-induced activation of Cds1 and hyperphosphorylation of Mrc1 is almost completely abrogated in an initiation-defective mutant of cdc45, but not in an mcm2 or polε mutant. The results suggest that Hsk1-mediated loading of Cdc45 onto replication origins may play important roles in replication stress-induced checkpoint.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2011
Seiji Matsumoto; Motoshi Hayano; Yutaka Kanoh; Hisao Masai
A number of different genetic backgrounds and growth conditions bypass DNA replication defects caused by the absence of yeast Hsk1 kinase, demonstrating the plasticity of the eukaryotic DNA replication program.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Masako Oda; Yutaka Kanoh; Yoshihisa Watanabe; Hisao Masai
Background Replication timing of metazoan DNA during S-phase may be determined by many factors including chromosome structures, nuclear positioning, patterns of histone modifications, and transcriptional activity. It may be determined by Mb-domain structures, termed as “replication domains”, and recent findings indicate that replication timing is under developmental and cell type-specific regulation. Methodology/Principal Findings We examined replication timing on the human 5q23/31 3.5-Mb segment in T cells and non-T cells. We used two independent methods to determine replication timing. One is quantification of nascent replicating DNA in cell cycle-fractionated stage-specific S phase populations. The other is FISH analyses of replication foci. Although the locations of early- and late-replicating domains were common between the two cell lines, the timing transition region (TTR) between early and late domains were offset by 200-kb. We show that Special AT-rich sequence Binding protein 1 (SATB1), specifically expressed in T-cells, binds to the early domain immediately adjacent to TTR and delays the replication timing of the TTR. Measurement of the chromosome copy number along the TTR during synchronized S phase suggests that the fork movement may be slowed down by SATB1. Conclusions Our results reveal a novel role of SATB1 in cell type-specific regulation of replication timing along the chromosome.