ABSTRACT: All animals must maintain genome and proteome integrity, especially when experiencing endogenous or exogenous stress. To cope, organisms have evolved sophisticated and conserved response systems: unfolded protein responses (UPRs) ensure proteostasis while the DNA damage response (DDR) maintains genome integrity. Emerging evidence suggests that UPRs and DDRs crosstalk, but the extent of crosstalk remains poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that inactivation of the DNA primases pri-1 and pri-2, which synthesize RNA primers at replication forks and whose inactivation causes DNA damage, activates the UPR of the endoplasmic reticulum (UPR-ER) in Caenorhabditis elegans, with especially strong activation in the germline. We observed activation of both the inositol-requiring-enzyme 1 (ire-1) and the protein kinase RNA-like ER kinase (PEK-1) branches of the UPR-ER. Interestingly, activation of the UPR-ER output gene hsp-4/BiP was partially independent of its canonical activators, ire-1 and xbp-1, and instead required the third branch of the UPR-ER, atf-6, suggesting functional redundancy. We further found that primase depletion specifically induces the UPR-ER, but not the mechanistically distinct cytosolic or mitochondrial UPRs, suggesting that primase inactivation causes compartment-specific rather than global stress. Functionally, loss of ire-1 or pek-1 sensitized animals to replication stress caused by hydroxyurea. Finally, transcriptome analysis of pri-1 embryos revealed several deregulated processes that could cause UPR-ER activation, including protein glycosylation, calcium signaling, and fatty acid desaturation. Together, our data show that the UPR-ER, but not other UPRs, responds to replication fork stress and that the UPR-ER is required to alleviate this stress.