Back to Search Start Over

Rad51-mediated replication fork reversal is a global response to genotoxic treatments in human cells

Authors :
Alessandro Vindigni
Raquel Herrador
Matteo Berti
Jonas A. Schmid
Massimo Lopes
Ralph Zellweger
Damian Dalcher
Karun Mutreja
University of Zurich
Lopes, Massimo
Source :
The Journal of Cell Biology, The Journal of cell biology
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Genotoxic treatments in human cells consistently induce uncoupling of replication forks and their remodeling into four-way junctions by the RAD51 recombinase.<br />Replication fork reversal protects forks from breakage after poisoning of Topoisomerase 1. We here investigated fork progression and chromosomal breakage in human cells in response to a panel of sublethal genotoxic treatments, using other topoisomerase poisons, DNA synthesis inhibitors, interstrand cross-linking inducers, and base-damaging agents. We used electron microscopy to visualize fork architecture under these conditions and analyzed the association of specific molecular features with checkpoint activation. Our data identify replication fork uncoupling and reversal as global responses to genotoxic treatments. Both events are frequent even after mild treatments that do not affect fork integrity, nor activate checkpoints. Fork reversal was found to be dependent on the central homologous recombination factor RAD51, which is consistently present at replication forks independently of their breakage, and to be antagonized by poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase/RECQ1-regulated restart. Our work establishes remodeling of uncoupled forks as a pivotal RAD51-regulated response to genotoxic stress in human cells and as a promising target to potentiate cancer chemotherapy.

Details

ISSN :
15408140
Volume :
208
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of cell biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....72058db0198503c001335677dcef4822