4.8 Article

Mitotic CDK Promotes Replisome Disassembly, Fork Breakage, and Complex DNA Rearrangements

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 73, Issue 5, Pages 915-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2018.12.021

Keywords

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Funding

  1. American Cancer Society [131415-PF-17-168-01-DMC]
  2. Medical Research Council [MC_UU_12016/13]
  3. Wellcome Trust [102943/Z/13/Z]
  4. Cancer Research UK [C578/A24558]
  5. NIH [GM080676, HL098316, CA213404]
  6. MRC [MC_UU_12016/13, MC_UU_00018/4] Funding Source: UKRI

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DNA replication errors generate complex chromosomal rearrangements and thereby contribute to tumorigenesis and other human diseases. One mechanism that triggers these errors is mitotic entry before the completion of DNA replication. To address how mitosis might affect DNA replication, we used Xenopus egg extracts. When mitotic CDK (Cyclin B1-CDK1) is used to drive interphase egg extracts into a mitotic state, the replicative CMG (CDC45/MCM2-7/GINS) helicase undergoes ubiquitylation on its MCM7 subunit, dependent on the E3 ubiquitin ligase TRAIP. Whether replisomes have stalled or undergone termination, CMG ubiquitylation is followed by its extraction from chromatin by the CDC48/p97 ATPase. TRAIP-dependent CMG unloading during mitosis is also seen in C. elegans early embryos. At stalled forks, CMG removal results in fork breakage and end joining events involving deletions and templated insertions. Our results identify a mitotic pathway of global replisome disassembly that can trigger replication fork collapse and DNA rearrangements.

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