2015
DOI: 10.1080/19491034.2015.1035843
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Termination of DNA replication forks: “Breaking up is hard to do”

Abstract: To ensure duplication of the entire genome, eukaryotic DNA replication initiates from thousands of replication origins. The replication forks move through the chromatin until they encounter forks from neighboring origins. During replication fork termination forks converge, the replisomes disassemble and topoisomerase II resolves the daughter DNA molecules. If not resolved efficiently, terminating forks result in genomic instability through the formation of pathogenic structures. Our recent findings shed light … Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…These data confirm that Topo IIα inhibition results in an accumulation of unreplicated DNA during mitosis, reflecting incomplete DNA replication in the previous S-phase. These observations are consistent with several studies in yeast or in vitro, showing that Topo IIα facilitates DNA replication [2,[27][28][29][30]. They also suggest that Topo IIα activity is essential to promote complete DNA replication in mammalian cells.…”
Section: Topoisomerase Iiα Inhibition Impairs Complete Dna Replicationsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…These data confirm that Topo IIα inhibition results in an accumulation of unreplicated DNA during mitosis, reflecting incomplete DNA replication in the previous S-phase. These observations are consistent with several studies in yeast or in vitro, showing that Topo IIα facilitates DNA replication [2,[27][28][29][30]. They also suggest that Topo IIα activity is essential to promote complete DNA replication in mammalian cells.…”
Section: Topoisomerase Iiα Inhibition Impairs Complete Dna Replicationsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…MCM7 is a subunit of the DNA replicative helicase in the replication complex and is involved in the initiation and elongation of replication (29, 32, 33). MCM7 helicase remains at the replication forks, even though the forks are stalled and strand breaks are induced (34, 35). γ‐H2AX colocalization with MCM7 suggests that the DSBs formed in HGPS cells are the result of the collapse of stalled replication forks.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During S phase, a small fraction of MCM2-7 double hexamers assemble into two active CMG helicases to fire origins promoted by CDC7 kinase and cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) [1216]. The rest of unused MCM2-7 double hexamers (residing at dormant origins) are likely removed by active replication forks, but it is unclear how this occurs [47,48]. At replication termination, CMG helicases are unloaded at converging forks after the final ligation step, which is regulated by polyubiquitilation of MCM7 contained within the CMG helicase, as revealed by recent studies on budding yeast and Xenopus egg extracts [4951].…”
Section: Origin Licensing and Firingmentioning
confidence: 99%