4.5 Article

A Proposal: Source of single strand DNA that elicits the SOS response

Journal

FRONTIERS IN BIOSCIENCE-LANDMARK
Volume 18, Issue -, Pages 312-323

Publisher

FRONTIERS IN BIOSCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.2741/4102

Keywords

SOS response; Translesion Synthesis; DNA repair; lesion bypass; DNA polymerase; Sliding Clamp; Review

Funding

  1. NIH [GM38839]

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Chromosome replication is performed by numerous proteins that function together as a replisome. The replisome machinery duplicates both strands of the parental DNA simultaneously. Upon DNA damage to the cell, replisome action produces single-strand DNA to which RecA binds, enabling its activity in cleaving the LexA repressor and thus inducing the SOS response. How single-strand DNA is produced by a replisome acting on damaged DNA is not clear. For many years it has been assumed the single-strand DNA is generated by the replicative helicase, which continues unwinding DNA even after DNA polymerase stalls at a template lesion. Recent studies indicate another source of the single-strand DNA, resulting from an inherently dynamic replisome that may hop over template lesions on both leading and lagging strands, thereby leaving single-strand gaps in the wake of the replication fork. These single-strand gaps are proposed to be the origin of the single-strand DNA that triggers the SOS response after DNA damage.

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