Literature DB >> 9702187

Chromosomal rearrangements occur in S. cerevisiae rfa1 mutator mutants due to mutagenic lesions processed by double-strand-break repair.

C Chen1, K Umezu, R D Kolodner.   

Abstract

Three temperature-sensitive S. cerevisiae RFA1 alleles were found to cause elevated mutation rates. These mutator phenotypes resulted from the accumulation of base substitutions, frameshifts, gross deletions (8 bp-18 kb), and nonreciprocal translocations. A representative rfa1 mutation exhibited a growth defect in conjunction with rad51, rad52, or rad10 mutations, suggesting an accumulation of double-strand breaks. rad10 and rad52 mutations eliminated deletion and translocation formation, whereas a rad51 mutation increased the frequency of these events and revealed a new class of genetic rearrangements--loss of a portion of a chromosome arm combined with telomere addition. The breakpoints of the translocations and deletions were flanked by imperfect direct repeats of 2-20 bp, similar to the breakpoint structures observed at translocations and gross deletions, including LOH events, underlying human cancer and other hereditary diseases.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9702187     DOI: 10.1016/s1097-2765(00)80109-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cell        ISSN: 1097-2765            Impact factor:   17.970


  85 in total

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Review 4.  Rescue of arrested replication forks by homologous recombination.

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Review 5.  DNA replication meets genetic exchange: chromosomal damage and its repair by homologous recombination.

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10.  Defects in DNA lesion bypass lead to spontaneous chromosomal rearrangements and increased cell death.

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