A common mechanism for recruiting the Rrm3 and RTEL1 accessory helicases to the eukaryotic replisome
Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: The eukaryotic replisome is assembled around the CMG (CDC45-MCM-GINS) replicative helicase, which encircles the leading strand DNA template at replication forks. When CMG stalls during DNA replication termination, or at barriers such as DNA-protein crosslinks on the leading strand template, a second helicase is deployed on the lagging strand template to support replisome progression. How these 'accessory' helicases are targeted to the replisome to mediate barrier bypass and replication termination remains unknown. Here, by combining AlphaFold structural modelling with experimental validation, we show that the budding yeast Rrm3 accessory helicase contains two Short Linear Interaction Motifs (SLIMs) in its disordered N-terminus, which interact with CMG and the leading-strand DNA polymerase PolE on one side of the replisome. This flexible tether positions Rrm3 adjacent to the lagging strand template on which it translocates, and is critical for replication termination in vitro and Rrm3 function in vivo. The primary accessory helicase in metazoa, RTEL1, is evolutionarily unrelated to Rrm3, but binds to CMG and POLE in an analogous manner, revealing a conserved docking mechanism for accessory helicases in the eukaryotic replisome.
SUBMITTER: Dr. Tom, D. Deegan
PROVIDER: S-SCDT-10_1038-S44318-024-00168-4 | biostudies-other |
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
ACCESS DATA