The Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants designated cly (cell lysis) cause cell lysis at elevated temperatures. The cly8 mutation, previously localized to an 80 kilobase region between GCD2 and SPT6 on the right arm of chromosome VII, has been used for mutation mapping and in recombination assays, but its genetic identity has remained unknown. Whole genome sequencing of cly8 mutant and CLY8 wild-type strains revealed four missense mutations specific to the cly8 mutant strain in the GCD2-SPT6 interval, three of these missense mutations affected essential genes. The esp1-G543E mutation, but not the two other missense mutations, recapitulated the temperature-sensitive growth, the cell lysis phenotype, and recessive nature of the cly8 mutation. The ESP1 gene encodes S. cerevisiae separase and is required for normal chromosome segregation during mitosis. Shifting cells containing the esp1-G543E mutation to the non-permissive temperature caused chromosome missegregation based on the analysis of DNA content by flow cytometry analysis. Taken together, these results indicate that the temperature-sensitive cly8 mutation is an allele of the essential ESP1 gene.