| Literature DB >> 31262821 |
Gang Feng1,2, Yue Yuan1,2, Zeyang Li2, Lu Wang1,2, Bo Zhang1,2, Jiechen Luo1,2, Jianguo Ji2, Daochun Kong3,2.
Abstract
DNA replication forks in eukaryotic cells stall at a variety of replication barriers. Stalling forks require strict cellular regulations to prevent fork collapse. However, the mechanism underlying these cellular regulations is poorly understood. In this study, a cellular mechanism was uncovered that regulates chromatin structures to stabilize stalling forks. When replication forks stall, H2BK33, a newly identified acetylation site, is deacetylated and H3K9 trimethylated in the nucleosomes surrounding stalling forks, which results in chromatin compaction around forks. Acetylation-mimic H2BK33Q and its deacetylase clr6-1 mutations compromise this fork stalling-induced chromatin compaction, cause physical separation of replicative helicase and DNA polymerases, and significantly increase the frequency of stalling fork collapse. Furthermore, this fork stalling-induced H2BK33 deacetylation is independent of checkpoint. In summary, these results suggest that eukaryotic cells have developed a cellular mechanism that stabilizes stalling forks by targeting nucleosomes and inducing chromatin compaction around stalling forks. This mechanism is named the "Chromsfork" control: Chromatin Compaction Stabilizes Stalling Replication Forks.Keywords: DNA replication; chromatin structure; histone modification; replication fork stability
Year: 2019 PMID: 31262821 PMCID: PMC6642376 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1821475116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205