Literature DB >> 15935756

Gross chromosomal rearrangements and elevated recombination at an inducible site-specific replication fork barrier.

Sarah Lambert1, Adam Watson, Daniel M Sheedy, Ben Martin, Antony M Carr.   

Abstract

Genomic rearrangements linked to aberrant recombination are associated with cancer and human genetic diseases. Such recombination has indirectly been linked to replication fork stalling. Using fission yeast, we have developed a genetic system to block replication forks at nonhistone/DNA complexes located at a specific euchromatic site. We demonstrate that stalled replication forks lead to elevated intrachromosomal and ectopic recombination promoting site-specific gross chromosomal rearrangements. We show that recombination is required to promote cell viability when forks are stalled, that recombination proteins associate with sites of fork stalling, and that recombination participates in deleterious site-specific chromosomal rearrangements. Thus, recombination is a "double-edged sword," preventing cell death when the replisome disassembles at the expense of genetic stability.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15935756     DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2005.03.022

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell        ISSN: 0092-8674            Impact factor:   41.582


  134 in total

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Journal:  J Cell Sci       Date:  2012-02-24       Impact factor: 5.285

2.  The DNA helicase Pfh1 promotes fork merging at replication termination sites to ensure genome stability.

Authors:  Roland Steinacher; Fekret Osman; Jacob Z Dalgaard; Alexander Lorenz; Matthew C Whitby
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2012-03-15       Impact factor: 11.361

Review 3.  Noise-driven heterogeneity in the rate of genetic-variant generation as a basis for evolvability.

Authors:  Jean-Pascal Capp
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2010-06       Impact factor: 4.562

4.  The F-box protein Dia2 overcomes replication impedance to promote genome stability in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Authors:  Deborah Blake; Brian Luke; Pamela Kanellis; Paul Jorgensen; Theo Goh; Sonya Penfold; Bobby-Joe Breitkreutz; Daniel Durocher; Matthias Peter; Mike Tyers
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2006-06-04       Impact factor: 4.562

5.  An AT-rich sequence in human common fragile site FRA16D causes fork stalling and chromosome breakage in S. cerevisiae.

Authors:  Haihua Zhang; Catherine H Freudenreich
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2007-08-03       Impact factor: 17.970

6.  Molecular anatomy and regulation of a stable replisome at a paused eukaryotic DNA replication fork.

Authors:  Arturo Calzada; Ben Hodgson; Masato Kanemaki; Avelino Bueno; Karim Labib
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2005-08-15       Impact factor: 11.361

7.  Transcription regulatory elements are punctuation marks for DNA replication.

Authors:  Ekaterina V Mirkin; Daniel Castro Roa; Evgeny Nudler; Sergei M Mirkin
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2006-05-02       Impact factor: 11.205

8.  Contrasting roles of checkpoint proteins as recombination modulators at Fob1-Ter complexes with or without fork arrest.

Authors:  Bidyut K Mohanty; Narendra K Bairwa; Deepak Bastia
Journal:  Eukaryot Cell       Date:  2009-02-20

Review 9.  Tus-Ter as a tool to study site-specific DNA replication perturbation in eukaryotes.

Authors:  Nicolai B Larsen; Ian D Hickson; Hocine W Mankouri
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2014       Impact factor: 4.534

Review 10.  Mechanisms of double-strand break repair in somatic mammalian cells.

Authors:  Andrea J Hartlerode; Ralph Scully
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  2009-09-25       Impact factor: 3.857

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