NDC1: a nuclear periphery component required for yeast spindle pole body duplication
Open Access
- 15 August 1993
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 122 (4), 743-751
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.122.4.743
Abstract
The spindle pole body (SPB) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae serves as the centrosome in this organism, undergoing duplication early in the cell cycle to generate the two poles of the mitotic spindle. The conditional lethal mutation ndc1-1 has previously been shown to cause asymmetric segregation, wherein all the chromosomes go to one pole of the mitotic spindle (Thomas, J. H., and D. Botstein. 1986. Cell. 44:65-76). Examination by electron microscopy of mutant cells subjected to the nonpermissive temperature reveals a defect in SPB duplication. Although duplication is seen to occur, the nascent SPB fails to undergo insertion into the nuclear envelope. The parental SPB remains functional, organizing a monopolar spindle to which all the chromosomes are presumably attached. Order-of-function experiments reveal that the NDC1 function is required in G1 after alpha-factor arrest but before the arrest caused by cdc34. Molecular analysis shows that the NDC1 gene is essential and that it encodes a 656 amino acid protein (74 kD) with six or seven putative transmembrane domains. This evidence for membrane association is further supported by immunofluorescent localization of the NDC1 product to the vicinity of the nuclear envelope. These findings suggest that the NDC1 protein acts within the nuclear envelope to mediate insertion of the nascent SPB.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- A gene required for the separation of chromosomes on the spindle apparatus in yeastCell, 1986
- Microtubule Organizing CentersAnnual Review of Cell Biology, 1985
- A positive selection for mutants lacking orotidine-5′-phosphate decarboxylase activity in yeast: 5-fluoro-orotic acid resistanceMolecular Genetics and Genomics, 1984
- Analysis of membrane and surface protein sequences with the hydrophobic moment plotJournal of Molecular Biology, 1984
- Structural rearrangements of tubulin and actin during the cell cycle of the yeast Saccharomyces.The Journal of cell biology, 1984
- A simple method for displaying the hydropathic character of a proteinJournal of Molecular Biology, 1982
- “Western Blotting”: Electrophoretic transfer of proteins from sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels to unmodified nitrocellulose and radiographic detection with antibody and radioiodinated protein AAnalytical Biochemistry, 1981
- Transformation in yeast: Development of a hybrid cloning vector and isolation of the can1 geneGene, 1979
- Microbial Determinations by Flow CytometryJournal of General Microbiology, 1979
- The λδ sequence of F is an insertion sequenceJournal of Molecular Biology, 1978