4.6 Review

More forks on the road to replication stress recovery

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 3, Issue 1, Pages 4-12

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jmcb/mjq049

Keywords

DNA repair; genome instability; cancer therapy

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 GM084020, R01 CA100862, R01 CA102283, R01 HL075783, R01 CA139429]
  2. Leukemia and Lymphoma Society [7388-06]

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High-fidelity replication of DNA, and its accurate segregation to daughter cells, is critical for maintaining genome stability and suppressing cancer. DNA replication forks are stalled by many DNA lesions, activating checkpoint proteins that stabilize stalled forks. Stalled forks may eventually collapse, producing a broken DNA end. Fork restart is typically mediated by proteins initially identified by their roles in homologous recombination repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). In recent years, several proteins involved in DSB repair by non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) have been implicated in the replication stress response, including DNA-PKcs, Ku, DNA Ligase IV-XRCC4, Artemis, XLF and Metnase. It is currently unclear whether NHEJ proteins are involved in the replication stress response through indirect (signaling) roles, and/or direct roles involving DNA end joining. Additional complexity in the replication stress response centers around RPA, which undergoes significant post-translational modification after stress, and RAD52, a conserved HR protein whose role in DSB repair may have shifted to another protein in higher eukaryotes, such as BRCA2, but retained its role in fork restart. Most cancer therapeutic strategies create DNA replication stress. Thus, it is imperative to gain a better understanding of replication stress response proteins and pathways to improve cancer therapy.

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