Rmi1 stimulates decatenation of double Holliday...
Transcript of Rmi1 stimulates decatenation of double Holliday...
1
Rmi1 stimulates decatenation of double Holliday junctions during
dissolution by Sgs1–Top3
Petr Cejka, Jody L. Plank, Csanad Z. Bachrati, Ian D. Hickson, and Stephen C.
Kowalczykowski
Supplementary Information
2
Supplementary Methods
Expression and purification of Top3. The TOP3 gene was amplified by polymerase
chain reaction (PCR) using wild type S. cerevisiae genomic DNA as a template (strain
S288C, Research Genetics) and primer pairs PC3
(CTCTGAACTCGAGCTGGAAGTTCTGTTCCAGGGGCCCGCTAGCGGATCCATG
AAAGTGCTATGTGTCGCAG; NheI site underlined and the sequence
complementary to TOP3 in bold) and PC4
(CGCAAATCCTCGAGCCCGGGTTACATGGATGCCTTGACACGG; XhoI site
underlined and the sequence complementary to TOP3 in bold). The reaction products
were digested with NheI and XhoI restriction endonucleases, and cloned into NheI and
XhoI sites in modified pFastBac1 vector1, creating pFB-GST-Top3. This placed the
TOP3 coding sequence downstream from sequence encoding glutathione-S-transferase
(GST) and a PreScission protease cleavage site, all of which is under the control of the
baculovirus polyhedron promoter. Proteins were expressed using the Bac-to-Bac
expression system (Invitrogen) in Sf9 cells according to manufacturer’s
recommendations. All purification steps were carried out on ice or at 4°C.
Top3 was harvested from 1.6 l of Sf9 cells 56 hours post-infection with the
appropriate baculovirus. Sf9 cells were resuspended in 48 ml lysis buffer and proteins
were extracted with salt as described previously for Sgs11, except 10 mM β-
mercaptoethanol was used instead of 1 mM DTT in the lysis buffer. Soluble extracts were
obtained by centrifugation at 58,000g for 30 min. Protein extracts were incubated batch-
wise with 4 ml glutathione affinity resin (Clontech) for 1 hour. The resin was extensively
washed batch-wise and then on-column with high salt wash buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl (pH
7.5), 5 mM β-mercaptoethanol, 1 M NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 10% (v/v) glycerol, 1 mM
Phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), 10 µg ml-1 leupeptin) and then with low salt
wash buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 5 mM β-mercaptoethanol, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM
EDTA, 10% (v/v) glycerol, 1 mM PMSF, and 10 µg ml-1 leupeptin), and proteins were
eluted with 2 column volumes of low salt wash buffer containing 10 mM glutathione.
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The GST affinity tag was cleaved off the GST–Top3 fusion by incubation with
PreScission protease. The NaCl concentration was then adjusted to 300 mM, and the
sample was mixed with 0.5 ml preequilibrated Bio-Rex 70 resin (Bio-Rad), incubated
batch wise for 15 min, and flow-through was collected by pouring the slurry into a plastic
chromatography column. The sample was then diluted with dilution buffer (50 mM Tris-
HCl (pH 7.5), 1 mM DTT, 1 mM EDTA, 10% (v/v) glycerol, 1 mM PMSF, and 10 µg
ml-1 leupeptin) so that NaCl concentration was adjusted to 50 mM. Using an ÄKTA
chromatography system (GE Healthcare), the sample was loaded on 1 ml HiTrap SP HP
column (GE Healthcare) at 0.8 ml min-1. The resin was washed with 20 ml SP buffer A
(50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 1 mM DTT, 50 mM NaCl, 10% (v/v) glycerol, 1 mM PMSF,
10 µg ml-1 leupeptin), and recombinant Top3 was eluted with a salt gradient. Top3 eluted
at ∼250 mM NaCl. The sample was then aliquoted, snap frozen in liquid nitrogen, and
stored at -80 °C. Protein concentration was determined by the Bradford method with
bovine serum albumin as a protein standard. Typical yield from 1.6 l culture was about 1
mg, and the final protein concentration was 3–7 µM.
Expression and purification of Rmi1. The RMI1 gene was amplified and cloned
similarly to the TOP3 gene using primer pairs PC5
(CTCTGAACTCGAGCTGGAAGTTCTGTTCCAGGGGCCCGCTAGCGAATTCATG
TCTTTTTCATCTATCTTATCAC; NheI site underlined and the sequence
complementary to RMI1 in bold) and PC6
(CGCAAATCCTCGAGCCCGGGCTAATCATTGGCTTTCCTTTTC; XhoI site
underlined and the sequence complementary to RMI1 in bold) to prepare pFB-GST-
Rmi1. The RMI1 gene was also cloned downstream from a MBP tag1, creating pFB-
MBP-Rmi1, using the same primer pair and restriction sites. Rmi1 was expressed and
purified similarly to Top3, omitting the Bio-Rex 70 step. Furthermore, since the above
protein preparation contained a small amount of ssDNA exonuclease contamination, we
also added a His(10) tag to the C-terminus of Rmi1. We used primer pairs PC 36
(TAAAGCAGTGTTTAAATTGAC) and PC 65
(CGCAATCCTCGAGCTAATGGTGATGGTGATGGTGATGGTGATGGTGATCA
TTGGCTTTCCTTTTC; sequence coding for His(10) tag in bold) to amplify the 3’ region
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of the RMI1 gene. The PCR product was digested with SacI and XhoI restriction
endonucleases and cloned into SacI and XhoI sites in pFB-GST-Rmi1, creating pFB-
GST-Rmi1-His. The recombinant protein was prepared by using glutathione affinity resin
as described above, followed by a second affinity purification step with Ni2+-
nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) agarose (Qiagen), according to the manufacturer’s
recommendation. The Rmi1–His(10) protein preparation contained no nuclease
contamination and both Rmi1 and Rmi1–His(10) protein preparations were equally active
in the assays performed in this manuscript. We typically obtained ∼1 mg of Rmi1 at a
concentration ∼10 µM.
Expression and purification of Top3–Rmi1 heterodimer. Top3-Rmi1 heterodimer
was obtained by coexpressing the GST–Top3 and MBP–Rmi1 fusion proteins. The Sf9
cells were lysed and protein extract was incubated with glutathione affinity resin as
detailed above for Top3 purification. However, the resin was then washed with buffer
containing only 250 mM NaCl, in order not to disrupt the Top3–Rmi1 heterodimer.
Following elution with glutathione, the sample was applied on preequilibrated amylose
affinity resin (New England Biolabs), incubated batch wise for 1 hour, and eluted with
MBP elution buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM β-mercaptoethanol, 150 mM
NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 10% (v/v) glycerol, 1 mM PMSF, 10 µg ml-1 leupeptin, and 10 mM
maltose). The protein was then cleaved by PreScission protease and further purified on 1
ml HiTrap SP HP column as described above. We typically obtained ∼1 mg of the
heterodimer at a concentration of ∼2-5 µM from 1.6 l cell culture.
Supplementary References
1 Cejka, P. & Kowalczykowski, S. C. The full-length S. cerevisiae SGS1 protein is
a vigorous DNA helicase that preferentially unwinds Holliday junctions. J. Biol.
Chem. 285, 8290-8301, (2010).
NHEJ
SSA
SDSA
Dissolution
Resolution
Crossover Non-crossover
Non-crossover
Non-crossover
Non-crossover
Non-crossover
Supplementary Figure 1 Schematic representation of recombination pathways that lead to crossovers versus non-crossovers in homologous recombination. Double-stranded DNA breaks may be repaired by non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) or one of several homologous recombination (HR) pathways. Sgs1 has been proposed to disrupt joint molecules and promote the synthesis-dependent strand annealing (SDSA) pathway. Sgs1 contributes to extensive 5’ DNA end resection by nucleases, which could promote the single-strand DNA annealing (SSA) pathway by revealing the homologies required for this pathway. Both SDSA and SSA pathways lead exclusively to non-crossover products. Finally, in the canonical HR model pathway leading to double Holliday junctions (dHJs), Sgs1, Top3, and Rmi1 promote dissolution leading to non-crossovers as opposed to the alternative resolution by nucleolytic cleavage leading to both crossover and non-crossover recombination products.
a4-
way
junc
tion
dsD
NA
0 0.05 0.17 1.0 6.0 Sgs1 (nM)
b
0 20 40 60 80 1000
20
40
60
80
100
SSBRPA
DNA saturation (%)
Dis
solu
tion
(%)
d
c
No
prot
ein
DN
A m
arke
r
–RPA +RPA
+ - + + + - + +
1,000900800700600500400
bp
1,200
Sgs1
Top3– -+ + ++ + + ++
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
DHJS
AB
CBM-intermediate
e
DN
A m
arke
r
1 2 4 8 15 30No
prot
ein
Time (min)
1,000900800700600500400
bp1,200
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
DHJS
AB
CBM-intermediate
Top3Sgs1
Supplementary Figure 2 Sgs1 and Top3, stimulated by replication protein A (RPA) or SSB, dissolve double Holliday junctions. (a) Sgs1 preferentially unwinds a 4-way junction. The indicated concentrations of Sgs1 were incubated in dissolution buffer with a labeled oligonucleotide-based 4-way junction or with dsDNA (both at 0.15 nM molecules) in the presence of unlabeled competitor pUC19 dsDNA (3.85 µM, base pairs) for 30 min. The amount of competitor dsDNA equals to the amount of dsDNA in the DHJS dissolution assays. The reaction products were separated on a 10% polyacrylamide gel. The panel shows a representative experiment. (b) Quantification of the data from experiments such as those shown in panel a. Error bars, s.e.m. (c) Sgs1 and Top3 can dissolve the DHJS in the absence of RPA, albeit at a lower efficiency. Sgs1 (6 nM) and/or Top3 (36 or 360 nM) were incubated with the DHJS as described in the Methods. The “CBM-intermediate” denotes the convergently branch-migrated intermediate with a reduced mobility relative to the DHJS. (d) Sgs1 and Top3 are stimulated equally by RPA or SSB. Quantification of the dissolution reactions carried out with Sgs1 (6 nM), Top3 (36 nM), and varying concentrations of RPA or E. coli SSB. The x-axis denotes the potential percentage of DNA binding by the respective ssDNA binding protein; 100% DNA saturation corresponds to 385 nM RPA and 480 nM SSB, respectively (see Methods for details). Error bars, s.e.m. (e) Time course of DHJS dissolution. Reactions containing Sgs1 (6 nM), Top3 (36 nM), and RPA were terminated at the indicated times. The “CBM-intermediate” denotes the convergently branch-migrated intermediate with a reduced mobility relative to the DHJS.
BamHI
Product markersSgs1 (6 nM)Top3 (36 nM)
Sgs1 (25 nM)Top3 (240 nM)
bp
1,000900800700600500
1,200
1,517
400300
200
100
+ + + + + + - + - - + -
DN
A m
arke
r
DN
A m
arke
r
DN
A m
arke
r
- + - - + -NheI SphI
+RPA
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
b
MM-DHJS
AB
A1B1
B2A2
A A1/
A2
B B1/
B2
CBM-intermediate
c
1 2 3 4 5
DH
JS
Sgs
1-To
p3 P
rodu
cts
A/B
het
erod
imer
B m
arke
rA
mar
ker
DHJS
AB
A/B heterodimer
a SphI &BamHI
NheI &BamHI
SphI &BamHI
NheI &BamHI
200 bp 265 bp
416 bp
465 bp
150 bp 266 bp
465 bp
416 bp
416 bp
465 bp
A
AB
B
B
AB1/B2
A1/A2
Supplementary Figure 3 Processing of dHJ by Sgs1 and Top3 occurs through convergent branch migration. (a) A schematic representation of a modified DHJS containing mismatches (MM-DHJS). Resolution of the MM-DHJS by nucleolytic cleavage preserves the mismatches, leaving the reaction products insensitive to cleavage by NheI and SphI. Dissolution through convergent branch migration creates the restriction sites and yields products susceptible to NheI and SphI cleavage: the positions of the BamHI, SphI and NheI sites are indicated. (b) MM-DHJS was incubated with the indicated concentrations of Sgs1, Top3, and RPA (578 nM, when present). Reaction products were purified, digested by the indicated restriction endonucleases, and analyzed by electrophoresis. Lanes 4-7 contain the product size markers: Markers A and B were generated as described in the Methods and digested with BamHI (A and B) or BamHI and NheI (A1/A2 and B1/B2). The “CBM-intermediate” denotes the convergently branch-migrated intermediate with a reduced mobility relative to the DHJS. The reaction products are sensitive to NheI or SphI cleavage, which indicates convergent branch migration of the HJs. (c) HJs migrate through homologous, and not heterologous region between the junctions. The products of a dissolution reaction containing Sgs1 (36 nM), Top3 (77 nM), and RPA (lane 2) comigrate with A and B molecules (lanes 4 and 5), the expected products of branch migration through the homologous region. Migration in the opposite direction (i.e., through heterology) would restore A/B and B/A heterodimers, the intermediates in DHJS preparation (lane 3). All DNA molecules were digested with BamHI prior to electrophoretic analysis.
b
c
a
d
DN
A m
arke
r
1,000900800700600500400
bp No
prot
ein
Sgs
1
[Top3] = 36 nM; [Rmi1] = 36 nM
hBLM
EcR
ecQ
Srs
2
1,200
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
300
DHJS
AB
CBM-intermediate
1,000900800700600500400
bp1,200
No
prot
ein
Top3
hTop
o III
α
hBLM
Sgs1
EcR
ecQ
Top3
1 2 3 4 5 6
DN
A m
arke
r
DHJS
AB
CBM-intermediate
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1,000900800700600500400
bp1,200
300
DN
A m
arke
r
No
prot
ein
Top3
[Sgs1] = 6 nM; [Rmi1] = 36 nM
hTop
o III
α
EcT
opo
I
whe
atTo
poI
DHJS
AB
CBM-intermediate
DN
A m
arke
r
1,000900800700600500
400
bp No
prot
ein
1,200RPA+–D
NA
mar
ker
1 2 3 4 5
DHJS
AB
CBM-intermediate
Supplementary Figure 4 The dissolution of dHJs is optimal with the cognate Sgs1 and Top3 protein pair. (a) Inclusion of yeast Rmi1 does not improve the efficiency of dissolution reactions performed with non-cognate helicases. Dissolution reactions were carried out with RPA (578 nM), Top3 (36 nM), Rmi1 (36 nM) and either yeast Sgs1 (6 nM, lane 3), human BLM (6 and 36 nM, lanes 4 and 5, respectively), E. coli RecQ (6 and 36 nM, lanes 6 and 7, respectively), or another S. cerevisiae helicase with 3’-5’ unwinding polarity, Srs2 (6 and 36 nM, lanes 8 and 9, respectively). (b) Inclusion of yeast Rmi1 does not improve the efficiency of dissolution reactions performed with non-cognate topoisomerases. Dissolution reactions were carried out with RPA (578 nM), Sgs1 (6 nM), Rmi1 (36 nM) and either yeast Top3 (36 nM, lane 3), human Topo IIIα (36 and 100 nM, lanes 4 and 5, respectively), E. coli Topo I (2.5 and 10 units, lanes 6 and 7, respectively), or wheat germ Topo I (2.5 and 10 units, lanes 8 and 9, respectively). (c) Dissolution can occur at high concentrations of non-cognate helicases and topoisomerases. The reactions contained, as indicated, Sgs1 (36 nM), human BLM (36 nM), E. coliRecQ (36 nM), Top3 (150 nM), human Topo IIIα (150 nM), and RPA (578 nM). (d) High concentrations of Top3 show a limited capacity to dissolve dHJ in the absence of a helicase. The DHJS dissolution reaction contained Top3 (360 nM) and RPA (578 nM), where indicated. Dissolution likely occurs through spontaneous thermal branch migration, and simultaneous strand passage catalyzed by Top3, due to a “random walk” by one or both HJs. “CBM-intermediate” in all panels indicates the position of the DHJS with convergent branch migration of the HJs.
b
b
– – + –
+ + –+ ––
Top3Rmi1Top3-Rmi1
+ + +
[RPA] = 0 nM[Sgs1] = 36 nM
DHJS
AB
CBM-intermediate
aTop3Rmi1Top3-Rmi1– – + –
+ + –+ ––
1 2 3 4 5 6
+ + +
[RPA] = 574 nM[Sgs1] = 36 nM
1 2 3 4 5 6
c
f
0 2 4 6 8 100
20
406080
–Rmi1+Rmi1
Time (min)
MM
-DH
JS m
igra
ted
past
Sph
I site
(AU
)
0 2 4 6 8 100
20406080
–Rmi1+Rmi1
Time (min)
Dis
solu
tion
(%)
g
0 1 10 100
h
Rmi1 (nM)
0
10
20
30
40
Dis
solu
tion
(%)
[Top3] = 1 nM[Sgs1] = 1 nM
No
prot
ein
1 2 3 4 5 6
DHJS
AB
Sgs1Top3Rmi1 (nM)
– + + + ++ + + +–
0 0 1 10 100
DHJS
AB
CBM-intermediate
d
DN
A m
arke
r
No
prot
ein
No
prot
ein
BamHI+SphI
+ + + + + + + + ++++++– – – – –
–Rm
i1
+Rm
i1
1 min 2 min
MM-DHJS
B (416 bp)A (465 bp)
A1 (265 bp)A2 (200 bp)
+ + + +++– –
4 min
–Rm
i1
–Rm
i1
+Rm
i1
+Rm
i1
1,000800
600500400
bp
300200
1,200
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
CBM-intermediate
e
Supplementary Figure 5 Rmi1 stimulates dissolution of dHJs at low concentrations of Sgs1 and Top3. (a) Dissolution of the DHJS by high concentrations of Sgs1 and Top3, in the presence of RPA, is not stimulated by Rmi1. The reactions contained Sgs1 (36 nM), Top3 (36 nM), Top3-Rmi1 heterodimer (36 nM), and Rmi1 (360 nM, lane 1; 36 nM, lane 2, respectively), as indicated, and RPA (578 nM). A and B markers represent the expected reaction products (lanes 5, 6). (b) In the absence of RPA, dissolution of the DHJS by high concentrations of Sgs1 and Top3, is not stimulated by Rmi1. The reactions contained Sgs1 (36 nM), Top3 (36 nM), Top3-Rmi1 heterodimer (36 nM) and Rmi1 (360 nM, lane 1; 36 nM, lane 2, respectively), as indicated. A and B markers represent the expected reaction products (lanes 5, 6). “CBM-intermediate” indicates the position of the DHJS with convergent branch migration of the HJs. (c)The MM-DHJS was used to detect the formation of the branch migration intermediate by restriction analysis. See Figure 2 and text for more details. (d) Rmi1 moderately promotes dissolution of dHJs catalyzed by intermediate concentrations of Sgs1-Top3. Restriction analysis of the time course dissolution of MM-DHJS. The reactions were carried out with Sgs1 (6 nM), either Top3 (36 nM, denoted as “-Rmi1”) or Top3-Rmi1 heterodimer (36 nM, denoted as “+Rmi1”), and RPA (578 nM), and terminated at the indicated times. The amount of the intermediate formed by partial HJ migration past the mismatch site corresponds to the amount of the 416 bp band generated by digestion with BamHI and SphI minus the amount of the 416 bp band generated from BamHI digestion alone, as indicated. Early (at 1 minute), the amount of the intermediate is similar without and with Rmi1, as detected by the similar intensity differences of the indicated bands in lanes 4 vs. 5, and 6 vs. 7. Later (at 4 min), there is more branch-migrated intermediate in reactions without Rmi1 (compare the relatively high intensity difference of the indicated bands in lanes 12 vs. 13 to the low intensity difference of the indicated bands in lanes 14 vs. 15). At the 2 and 4 minute time points, the reactions which contain Rmi1 (lanes 10, 11, 14, and 15) appear to contain less substrate than the Rmi1 controls. This is due to the catenation activity of Sgs1-Top3-Rmi1 at these concentrations, which retards the electrophoretic mobility of some of the unresolved DHJS. This activity does not affect the linear molecules generated by restriction digestion and, therefore, does not affect the quantification of the experiment. (e) Quantification of experiments such as those shown in panel d showing the amount of the intermediate migrated past the SphI site (see panel c) during the course of MM-DHJS dissolution. The Y-axis shows arbitrary sums of pixel intensity values. Error bars, s.e.m. (f) Kinetics of MM-DHJS dissolution, based on experiments such as those shown in panel d. (g) Rmi1 stimulates DHJS dissolution at low Sgs1 and Top3 concentrations. DHJS was incubated with Sgs1 (1 nM), Top3 (1 nM), and the indicated concentration of Rmi1, in the presence of RPA (578 nM). (h) Quantification of experiments such as those shown in panel g. Error bars, s.e.m.
254
127
63.5
321684210.5 Top3 (nM)
–Rm
i1+R
mi1
(2.7
nM
)
a
3 5 7 10 20 30 40 50No
prot
ein
0 Rmi1 (nM)
b
Supplementary Figure 6 Rmi1 stimulates the dissolution of oligonucleotide-based dHJ DNA. (a) Dissolution of the oligonucleotide-based dHJ DNA is stimulated by Rmi1 at low Top3 concentrations. Reactions contained Sgs1 (0.22 nM), Top3 as indicated, and Rmi1 (2.7 nM) where indicated. (b) The Rmi1 concentration dependence of dissolution by Sgs1 and Top3. Reactions contained Sgs1 (0.56 nM), Top3 (3.2 nM), and the indicated concentrations of Rmi1.
a
Catenated kDNA
Nicked monomer kDNA
Covalently closed monomer kDNA
DN
A m
arke
r
Top3-Rmi1 (2 nM)Top3 (2 nM) Sgs1 (2 nM)
+–+++
––––+
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
++––
Rmi1 (nM)0 0.2 0.5 1 2 4 0
+++++++
b
Catenated kDNA
Nicked monomer kDNA
Covalently closed monomer kDNA
Sgs1 (nM)Top3 (nM)Top3-Rmi1 (nM)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
3 3 3 3 1 1 1 1 0.5 0.520 0 3 0 6 0 1 0 1 0
0 20 0 3 0 6 0 1 0 1
Supplementary Figure 7 Rmi1 greatly promotes decatenation of kinetoplast DNA (kDNA). (a) Decatenation of kDNA is dependent on Rmi1 concentration. The reactions contained RPA (340 nM), Sgs1 (2 nM), Top3 (2 nM, lanes 2-7) or Top3-Rmi1 heterodimer (2 nM, lane 8), and varying concentrations of Rmi1, as indicated. (b) The stimulation of kDNA decatenation by Rmi1 occurs over range of protein concentrations. The reactions contained RPA (340 nM), Sgs1, and either Top3 or Top3-Rmi1 heterodimer, at the concentrations indicated.
Pro
tein
mar
ker
Ext
ract
with
out T
op3
Ext
ract
with
Top
3
GS
T el
uate
Cle
avag
e w
ith P
P
Bio
Rex
70
flow
thro
ugh
HiT
rap
SP
elu
ate
GST-Top3Top3
PP
GST andcontaminants
200116
9766
45
kDa
31
GST-Rmi1
Rmi1
PP
GST andcontaminants
Pro
tein
mar
ker
Ext
ract
with
out R
mi1
Ext
ract
with
Rm
i1
GS
T el
uate
Cle
avag
e w
ith P
P
HiT
rap
SP
elu
ate
200116
9766
45
kDa
31
22
MBP-Rmi1 and Top3
Rmi1
PP and MBP
GST-Top3
200
1169766
45
kDa
31
Pro
tein
mar
ker
Ext
ract
with
out T
op3-
Rm
i1
GS
T el
uate
PP
cle
avag
e
HiT
rap
SP
elu
ate
Am
ylos
e el
uate
Am
ylos
e flo
wth
roug
h
Ext
ract
with
Top
3-R
mi1
b
c
a
GST andcontaminants
Supplementary Figure 8 Purification of Top3, Rmi1, and the Top3-Rmi1 heterodimer proteins. (a) Analysis of a representative Top3 purification by SDS-polyacrylamide gel (10%) electrophoresis. During purification, the N-terminal glutathione-S-transferase (GST) tag was cleaved by PreScission protease (PP). (b) Analysis of a representative Rmi1 purification by SDS-polyacrylamide gel (10%) electrophoresis. During purification, the N-terminal GST tag was cleaved by PreScission protease (PP). (c) Analysis of a representative Top3-Rmi1 heterodimer purification by SDS-polyacrylamide gel (10%) electrophoresis. During purification, the N-terminal GST tag on Top3 protein and the N-terminal maltose binding tag (MBP) on Rmi1 protein were cleaved by PreScission protease (PP). The gels in all panels were photographed after staining with Coomassie Brilliant Blue.