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An intrinsic S/G2 checkpoint enforced by ATR


AUTHORS

Saldivar J , Hamperl S , Bocek MJ , Chung M , Bass TE , Cisneros-Soberanis F , Samejima K , Xie L , Paulsen JR , Earnshaw WC , Cortez D , Meyer T , Cimprich KA . Science. 2018 8 ; 361(). 806-810

ABSTRACT

The cell cycle is strictly ordered to ensure faithful genome duplication and chromosome segregation. Control mechanisms establish this order by dictating when a cell transitions from one phase to the next. Much is known about the control of the G1/S, G2/M, and metaphase/anaphase transitions, but thus far, no control mechanism has been identified for the S/G2 transition. Here we show that cells transactivate the mitotic gene network as they exit the S phase through a CDK1 (cyclin-dependent kinase 1)–directed FOXM1 phosphorylation switch. During normal DNA replication, the checkpoint kinase ATR (ataxia-telangiectasia and Rad3-related) is activated by ETAA1 to block this switch until the S phase ends. ATR inhibition prematurely activates FOXM1, deregulating the S/G2 transition and leading to early mitosis, underreplicated DNA, and DNA damage. Thus, ATR couples DNA replication with mitosis and preserves genome integrity by enforcing an S/G2 checkpoint.