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Spatial separation between replisome- and template-induced replication stress signaling.


ABSTRACT: Polymerase-blocking DNA lesions are thought to elicit a checkpoint response via accumulation of single-stranded DNA at stalled replication forks. However, as an alternative to persistent fork stalling, re-priming downstream of lesions can give rise to daughter-strand gaps behind replication forks. We show here that the processing of such structures by an exonuclease, Exo1, is required for timely checkpoint activation, which in turn prevents further gap erosion in S phase. This Rad9-dependent mechanism of damage signaling is distinct from the Mrc1-dependent, fork-associated response to replication stress induced by conditions such as nucleotide depletion or replisome-inherent problems, but reminiscent of replication-independent checkpoint activation by single-stranded DNA Our results indicate that while replisome stalling triggers a checkpoint response directly at the stalled replication fork, the response to replication stress elicited by polymerase-blocking lesions mainly emanates from Exo1-processed, postreplicative daughter-strand gaps, thus offering a mechanistic explanation for the dichotomy between replisome- versus template-induced checkpoint signaling.

SUBMITTER: Garcia-Rodriguez N 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5920239 | biostudies-literature | 2018 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Spatial separation between replisome- and template-induced replication stress signaling.

García-Rodríguez Néstor N   Morawska Magdalena M   Wong Ronald P RP   Daigaku Yasukazu Y   Ulrich Helle D HD  

The EMBO journal 20180326 9


Polymerase-blocking DNA lesions are thought to elicit a checkpoint response via accumulation of single-stranded DNA at stalled replication forks. However, as an alternative to persistent fork stalling, re-priming downstream of lesions can give rise to daughter-strand gaps behind replication forks. We show here that the processing of such structures by an exonuclease, Exo1, is required for timely checkpoint activation, which in turn prevents further gap erosion in S phase. This Rad9-dependent mec  ...[more]

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