4.3 Article

Replication Stress-Induced Chromosome Breakage Is Correlated with Replication Fork Progression and Is Preceded by Single-Stranded DNA Formation

Journal

G3-GENES GENOMES GENETICS
Volume 1, Issue 5, Pages 327-335

Publisher

GENETICS SOCIETY AMERICA
DOI: 10.1534/g3.111.000554

Keywords

chromosome fragile sites; double strand breaks; mec1; replication checkpoint; single-stranded DNA

Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [18926]
  2. Pathway to Independence Award [1K99GM081378-01]

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Chromosome breakage as a result of replication stress has been hypothesized to be the direct consequence of defective replication fork progression, or collapsed replication forks. However, direct and genome-wide evidence that collapsed replication forks give rise to chromosome breakage is still lacking. Previously we showed that a yeast replication checkpoint mutant mec1-1, after transient exposure to replication impediment imposed by hydroxyurea (HU), failed to complete DNA replication, accumulated single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) at the replication forks, and fragmented its chromosomes. In this study, by following replication fork progression genome-wide via ssDNA detection and by direct mapping of chromosome breakage after HU exposure, we have tested the hypothesis that the chromosome breakage in mec1 cells occurs at collapsed replication forks. We demonstrate that sites of chromosome breakage indeed correlate with replication fork locations. Moreover, ssDNA can be detected prior to chromosome breakage, suggesting that ssDNA accumulation is the common precursor to double strand breaks at collapsed replication forks.

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