Title
Positive Torsional Strain Causes the Formation of a Four-way Junction at Replication Forks
Date Issued
26 January 2001
Access level
open access
Resource Type
editorial
Author(s)
Postow L.
Ullsperger C.
Keller R.W.
Vologodskii A.V.
Cozzarelli N.R.
Universidad de California
Publisher(s)
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Inc.
Abstract
The advance of a DNA replication fork requires an unwinding of the parental double helix. This in turn creates a positive superhelical stress, a (+)-ΔLk, that must be relaxed by topoisomerases for replication to proceed. Surprisingly, partially replicated plasmids with a (+)-ΔLk, were not supercoiled nor were the replicated arms interwound in precatenanes. The electrophoretic mobility of these molecules indicated that they have no net writhe. Instead, the (+)-ΔLk, is absorbed by a regression of the replication fork. As the parental DNA strands re-anneal, the resultant displaced daughter strands base pair to each other to form a four-way junction at the replication fork, which is locally identical to a Holliday junction in recombination. We showed by restriction endonuclease digestion that the junction can form at either the terminus or the origin of replication and we visualized the structure with scanning force microscopy. We discuss possible physiological implications of the junction for stalled replication in vivo.
Start page
2790
End page
2796
Volume
276
Issue
4
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Tecnología de modificación genética
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0035951787
PubMed ID
Source
Journal of Biological Chemistry
ISSN of the container
00219258
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus