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DNA damage tolerance by recombination: Molecular pathways and DNA structures
Affiliation:IFOM, The FIRC Institute of Molecular Oncology, Via Adamello 16, 20139 Milan, Italy
Abstract:Replication perturbations activate DNA damage tolerance (DDT) pathways, which are crucial to promote replication completion and to prevent fork breakage, a leading cause of genome instability. One mode of DDT uses translesion synthesis polymerases, which however can also introduce mutations. The other DDT mode involves recombination-mediated mechanisms, which are generally accurate. DDT occurs prevalently postreplicatively, but in certain situations homologous recombination is needed to restart forks. Fork reversal can function to stabilize stalled forks, but may also promote error-prone outcome when used for fork restart. Recent years have witnessed important advances in our understanding of the mechanisms and DNA structures that mediate recombination-mediated damage-bypass and highlighted principles that regulate DDT pathway choice locally and temporally. In this review we summarize the current knowledge and paradoxes on recombination-mediated DDT pathways and their workings, discuss how the intermediate DNA structures may influence genome integrity, and outline key open questions for future research.
Keywords:Chromosome replication  DNA damage tolerance  Replication stress  Homologous recombination  Fork reversal  PCNA  Ubiquitin/SUMO modifications
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