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ERCC3 was initially identified as a gene correcting the nucleotide excision repair (NER) defect of xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group B (XP-B). The recent finding that its gene product is identical to the p89 subunit of basal transcription factor BTF2(TFIIH), opened the possibility that it is not directly involved in NER but that it regulates the transcription of one or more NER genes. Using an in vivo microinjection repair assay and an in vitro NER system based on cell-free extracts we demonstrate that ERCC3 in BTF2 is directly implicated in excision repair. Antibody depletion experiments support the idea that the p62 BTF2 subunit and perhaps the entire transcription factor function in NER. Microinjection experiments suggest that exogenous ERCC3 can exchange with ERCC3 subunits in the complex. Expression of a dominant negative K436-->R ERCC3 mutant, expected to have lost all helicase activity, completely abrogates NER and transcription and concomitantly induces a dramatic chromatin collapse. These findings establish the role of ERCC3 and probably the entire BTF2 complex in transcription in vivo which was hitherto only demonstrated in vitro. The results strongly suggest that transcription itself is a critical component for maintenance of chromatin structure. The remarkable dual role of ERCC3 in NER and transcription provides a clue in understanding the complex clinical features of some inherited repair syndromes.
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PMID:Correction of xeroderma pigmentosum repair defect by basal transcription factor BTF2 (TFIIH). 815 4

A 246-bp imperfect palindrome has the potential to form hairpin structures in single-stranded DNA during replication. Genetic evidence suggests that these structures are converted to double-strand breaks by the SbcCD nuclease and that the double-strand breaks are repaired by recombination. We investigated the role of a range of recombination mutations on the viability of cells containing this palindrome. The palindrome was introduced into the Escherichia coli chromosome by phage lambda lysogenization. This was done in both wt and sbcC backgrounds. Repair of the SbcCD-induced double-strand breaks requires a large number of proteins, including the components of both the RecB and RecF pathways. Repair does not involve PriA-dependent replication fork restart, which suggests that the double-strand break occurs after the replication fork has passed the palindrome. In the absence of SbcCD, recombination still occurs, probably using a gap substrate. This process is also PriA independent, suggesting that there is no collapse of the replication fork. In the absence of RecA, the RecQ helicase is required for palindrome viability in a sbcC mutant, suggesting that a helicase-dependent pathway exists to allow replicative bypass of secondary structures.
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PMID:Palindromes as substrates for multiple pathways of recombination in Escherichia coli. 1065 7

The faithful replication of the genome is essential for the survival of all organisms. It is not surprising therefore that numerous mechanisms have evolved to ensure that duplication of the genome occurs with only minimal risk of mutation induction. One mechanism of genome destabilization is replication fork demise, which can occur when a translocating fork meets a lesion or adduct in the template. Indeed, the collapse of replication forks has been suggested to occur in every replicative cell cycle making this a potentially significant problem for all proliferating cells. The RecQ helicases, which are essential for the maintenance of genome stability, are thought to function during DNA replication. In particular, RecQ helicase mutants display replication defects and have phenotypes consistent with an inability to efficiently reinitiate replication following replication fork demise. Here, we review some current models for how replication fork repair might be effected, and discuss potential roles for RecQ helicases in this process.
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PMID:RecQ helicases and cellular responses to DNA damage. 1242 30

Human aging is associated with accumulation of cells that have undergone replicative senescence. The rare premature aging Werner's syndrome (WS) provides a phenocopy of normal human aging and WS patient cells recapitulate the aging phenotype in culture as they rapidly lose the ability to proliferate or replicate their DNA. WS is associated with loss of functional WRN protein. Although the biochemical properties of WRN protein, which possesses both helicase and exonuclease activities, suggest an involvement in DNA metabolism, its action in cells is not clear. Here, we provide experimental evidence for a role of the WRN protein in DNA replication in normally proliferating cells. Most importantly, we demonstrate that in the absence of functional WRN protein, replication forks from origins of bidirectional replication fail to progress normally, resulting in marked asymmetry of bidirectional forks. We propose that WRN acts in normal DNA replication to prevent collapse of replication forks or to resolve DNA junctions at stalled replication forks, and that loss of this capacity may be a contributory factor in premature aging.
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PMID:Asymmetry of DNA replication fork progression in Werner's syndrome. 1288 51

The repair of double-strand DNA breaks by homologous recombination is essential for the maintenance of genome stability. In herpes simplex virus 1, double-strand DNA breaks may arise as a consequence of replication fork collapse at sites of oxidative damage, which is known to be induced upon viral infection. Double-strand DNA breaks are also generated by cleavage of viral a sequences by endonuclease G during genome isomerization. We have reconstituted a system using purified proteins in which strand invasion is coupled with DNA synthesis. In this system, the viral single-strand DNA-binding protein promotes assimilation of single-stranded DNA into a homologous supercoiled plasmid, resulting in the formation of a displacement loop. The 3' terminus of the invading DNA serves as a primer for long-chain DNA synthesis promoted by the viral DNA replication proteins, including the polymerase and helicase-primase. Efficient extension of the invading primer also requires a DNA-relaxing enzyme (eukaryotic topoisomerase I or DNA gyrase). The viral polymerase by itself is insufficient for DNA synthesis, and a DNA-relaxing enzyme cannot substitute for the viral helicase-primase. The viral single-strand DNA-binding protein, in addition to its role in the invasion process, is also required for long-chain DNA synthesis. Form X, a topologically distinct, positively supercoiled form of displacement-loop, does not serve as a template for DNA synthesis. These observations support a model in which recombination and replication contribute toward maintaining viral genomic stability by repairing double-strand breaks. They also account for the extensive branching observed during viral replication in vivo.
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PMID:Reconstitution of recombination-dependent DNA synthesis in herpes simplex virus 1. 1292 2

A reconstituted in vitro bacteriophage T4 DNA replication system was studied on a synthetic 70-mer minicircle substrate. This substrate was designed so that dGMP and dCMP were exclusively incorporated into the leading and the lagging strand, respectively. This design allows the simultaneous and independent measurement of the leading and lagging strand synthesis. In this paper, we report our results on the characterization of the 70-mer minicircle substrate. We show here that the minicircle substrate supports coordinated leading and lagging strand synthesis under the experimental conditions employed. The rate of the leading strand fork movement was at an average of approximately 150 nucleotides/s. This rate decreased to less than 30 nucleotides/s when the helicase was omitted from the reaction. These results suggest that both the holoenzyme and the primosome can be simultaneously assembled onto the minicircle substrate. The lagging strand synthesized on this substrate is of an average of 1.5 kb, and the length of the Okazaki fragments increased with decreasing [rNTPs]. The proper response of the Okazaki fragment size toward the change of the priming signal further indicates a functional replisome assembled on the minicircle template. The effects of various protein components on the leading and lagging strand synthesis were also studied. The collective results indicate that coordinated strand synthesis only takes place within certain protein concentration ranges. The optimal protein levels of the proteins that constitute the T4 replisome generally bracket the concentrations of the same proteins in vivo. Omission of the primase has little effect on the rate of dNMP incorporation or the rate of the fork movement on the leading strand within the first 30 s of the reaction. This inhibition only becomes significant at later times of the reaction and may be associated with the accumulation of single-stranded DNA leading to the collapse of active replisomes.
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PMID:The application of a minicircle substrate in the study of the coordinated T4 DNA replication. 1450 Jul 18

Replication forks often stall or collapse when they encounter a DNA lesion. Fork regression is part of several major paths to the repair of stalled forks, allowing nonmutagenic bypass of the lesion. We have shown previously that Escherichia coli RecA protein can promote extensive regression of a forked DNA substrate that mimics a possible structure of a replication fork stalled at a leading strand lesion. Using electron microscopy and gel electrophoresis, we demonstrate that another protein, E. coli RecG helicase, promotes extensive fork regression in the same system. The RecG-catalyzed fork regression is very efficient and faster than the RecA-promoted reaction (up to 240 bp s(-1)), despite very limited processivity of the RecG protein. The reaction is dependent upon ATP hydrolysis and is stimulated by single-stranded binding protein. The RecA- and RecG-promoted reactions are not synergistic. In fact, RecG functions poorly under the conditions optimal for the RecA reaction, and vice versa. When both RecA and RecG proteins are incubated with the DNA substrate, high RecG concentrations inhibit the RecA protein-promoted fork regression. The very different reaction profiles may reflect a situational application of these proteins to the rescue of stalled replication forks in vivo.
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PMID:Situational repair of replication forks: roles of RecG and RecA proteins. 1470 60

Replication forks are constantly subjected to events that lead to fork stalling, stopping, or collapse. Using a synthetic rolling circle DNA substrate, we demonstrate that a block to the lagging-strand polymerase does not compromise helicase or leading-strand polymerase activity. In fact, lagging-strand synthesis also continues. Thus, the blocked lagging-strand enzyme quickly dissociates from the block site and resumes synthesis on new primed sites. Furthermore, studies in which the lagging polymerase is continuously blocked show that the leading polymerase continues unabated even as it remains attached to the lagging-strand enzyme. Hence, upon encounter of a block to the lagging stand, the polymerases functionally uncouple yet remain physically associated. Further study reveals that naked single-stranded DNA results in disruption of a stalled polymerase from its beta-DNA substrate. Thus, as the replisome advances, the single-stranded DNA loop that accumulates on the lagging-strand template releases the stalled lagging-strand polymerase from beta after SSB protein is depleted. The lagging-strand polymerase is then free to continue Okazaki fragment production.
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PMID:Functional uncoupling of twin polymerases: mechanism of polymerase dissociation from a lagging-strand block. 1501 81

We have studied promoter clearance at a series of RNA polymerase II promoters with varying spacing of the TATA box and start site. We find that regardless of promoter spacing, the upstream edge of the transcription bubble forms 20 bp from TATA. The bubble expands downstream until 18 bases are unwound and the RNA is at least 7 nt long, at which point the upstream approximately 8 bases of the bubble abruptly reanneal (bubble collapse). If either bubble size or transcript length is insufficient, bubble collapse cannot occur. Bubble collapse coincides with the end of the requirement for the TFIIH helicase for efficient transcript elongation. We also provide evidence that bubble collapse suppresses pausing at +7 to +9 caused by the presence of the B finger segment of TFIIB within the complex. Our results indicate that bubble collapse defines the RNA polymerase II promoter clearance transition.
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PMID:The role of the transcription bubble and TFIIB in promoter clearance by RNA polymerase II. 1598 68

Genomic DNA is particularly vulnerable to mutation during S-phase when the two strands of parental duplex DNA are separated during the process of semi-conservative DNA replication. Lesions that are normally repaired efficiently in the context of double stranded DNA can cause replication forks to stall or, more dangerously, collapse. Cells from Bloom's syndrome patients, that lack the RecQ helicase BLM, show defects in the response to replicative stress and contain a multitude of chromosomal aberrations, which primarily arise through excessive levels of homologous recombination. Here, recent findings are reviewed that further our understanding of the role that BLM plays in the management of damaged replication forks.
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PMID:Role of the BLM helicase in replication fork management. 1736 39


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