Detailed Information on Publication Record
2012
Unwinding of synthetic replication and recombination substrates by Srs2
MARINI PALOMEQUE, María Victoria and Lumír KREJČÍBasic information
Original name
Unwinding of synthetic replication and recombination substrates by Srs2
Authors
MARINI PALOMEQUE, María Victoria (858 Uruguay, belonging to the institution) and Lumír KREJČÍ (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution)
Edition
DNA Repair, ELSEVIER, 2012, 1568-7864
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Článek v odborném periodiku
Field of Study
10600 1.6 Biological sciences
Country of publisher
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
References:
Impact factor
Impact factor: 4.274
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14310/12:00057534
Organization unit
Faculty of Science
UT WoS
000310761100002
Keywords in English
DNA repair; Recombination; Srs2; Replication; Helicase
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 22/4/2013 14:51, Ing. Andrea Mikešková
Abstract
V originále
The budding yeast Srs2 protein possesses 3 to 5 DNA helicase activity and channels untimely recombination to post-replication repair by removing Rad51 from ssDNA. However, it also promotes recombination via a synthesis-dependent strand-annealing pathway (SDSA). Furthermore, at the replication fork, Srs2 is required for fork progression and prevents the instability of trinucleotide repeats. To better understand the multiple roles of the Srs2 helicase during these processes, we analysed the ability of Srs2 to bind and unwind various DNA substrates that mimic structures present during DNA replication and recombination. While leading or lagging strands were efficiently unwound, the presence of ssDNA binding protein RPA presented an obstacle for Srs2 translocation. We also tested the preferred directionality of unwinding of various substrates and studied the effect of Rad51 and Mre11 proteins on Srs2 helicase activity. These biochemical results help us understand the possible role of Srs2 in the processing of stalled or blocked replication forks as a part of post-replication repair as well as homologous recombination (HR).
Links
GAP207/12/2323, research and development project |
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GA301/09/1917, research and development project |
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GD203/09/H046, research and development project |
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ME10048, research and development project |
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