| Literature DB >> 35129614 |
Milos A Cvetkovic1, Esther Ortega1,2, Roberto Bellelli3, Alessandro Costa1.
Abstract
Pol epsilon is a tetrameric assembly that plays distinct roles during eukaryotic chromosome replication. It catalyses leading strand DNA synthesis; yet this function is dispensable for viability. Its non-catalytic domains instead play an essential role in the assembly of the active replicative helicase and origin activation, while non-essential histone-fold subunits serve a critical function in parental histone redeposition onto newly synthesised DNA. Furthermore, Pol epsilon plays a structural role in linking the RFC-Ctf18 clamp loader to the replisome, supporting processive DNA synthesis, DNA damage response signalling as well as sister chromatid cohesion. In this minireview, we discuss recent biochemical and structural work that begins to explain various aspects of eukaryotic chromosome replication, with a focus on the multiple roles of Pol epsilon in this process.Entities:
Keywords: CMG; Ctf18; Pol epsilon; chromatin; cryo-EM; replisome
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35129614 PMCID: PMC9022971 DOI: 10.1042/BST20210082
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Soc Trans ISSN: 0300-5127 Impact factor: 4.919
Figure 1.The role of Pol epsilon in replication origin activation.
(A) Schematic representation of the cascade of molecular events leading to the replication fork establishment. (B) The structure of CMG bound to Pol epsilon explains the mechanism whereby Dpb2 and the Pol2 C-terminal domain recruit GINS to the MCM complex.
Figure 2.The role of Pol epsilon in chromatin replication.
(A) Schematic representation of nucleosome uncoiling in front of the replication fork and parental histone redeposition onto duplicated DNA. (B) Modelled interactions between Dpb3–Dpb4 and histones H3–H4 based on the homology with histones H2A–H2B. (C) The structure of full-length Pol epsilon. (D) The rigid structure of full-length Pol epsilon would be able to accommodate an H3–H4 interaction with unstructured Dpb3–Dpb4 tails but not a histone-core-like engagement.
Figure 3.Mechanism of leading-strand priming and a role for Ctf18–RFC in establishing processive leading-strand synthesis.
(A) Leading strand priming requires substrate hand-off from Pol delta to Pol epsilon. Priming of the leading strand on the leftward moving replisome occurs as the first lagging-strand priming event on the rightward moving replisome. (B) Ctf18–RFC constitutively binds Pol epsilon and loads the PCNA sliding clamp onto leading-strand DNA.