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    Cell. 1990 Jul 27;62(2):213-24.

    A candidate protein kinase C gene, PKC1, is required for the S. cerevisiae cell cycle.

    Levin DE, Fields FO, Kunisawa R, Bishop JM, Thorner J.

    Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of California, San Francisco 94143.

    Probes derived from cDNAs encoding isozymes of rat protein kinase C (PKC) were used to screen the genome of the budding yeast S. cerevisiae. A single gene (PKC1) was isolated that encodes a putative protein kinase closely related to the alpha, beta, and gamma subspecies of mammalian PKC. Deletion of PKC1 resulted in recessive lethality. Cells depleted of the PKC1 gene product displayed a uniform phenotype, a characteristic of cell division cycle (cdc) mutants, and arrested cell division at a point subsequent to DNA replication, but prior to mitosis. Unlike most cdc mutants, which continue to grow in the absence of cell division, PKC1-depleted cells arrested growth with small buds. PKC1 may regulate a previously unrecognized checkpoint in the cell cycle.

    PMID: 2196995 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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