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Synergy of topoisomerase and structural-maintenance-of-chromosomes proteins creates a universal pathway to simplify genome topology.

Enzo OrlandiniDavide MarenduzzoDavide Michieletto
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2019)
Topological entanglements severely interfere with important biological processes. For this reason, genomes must be kept unknotted and unlinked during most of a cell cycle. Type II topoisomerase (TopoII) enzymes play an important role in this process but the precise mechanisms yielding systematic disentanglement of DNA in vivo are not clear. Here we report computational evidence that structural-maintenance-of-chromosomes (SMC) proteins-such as cohesins and condensins-can cooperate with TopoII to establish a synergistic mechanism to resolve topological entanglements. SMC-driven loop extrusion (or diffusion) induces the spatial localization of essential crossings, in turn catalyzing the simplification of knots and links by TopoII enzymes even in crowded and confined conditions. The mechanism we uncover is universal in that it does not qualitatively depend on the specific substrate, whether DNA or chromatin, or on SMC processivity; we thus argue that this synergy may be at work across organisms and throughout the cell cycle.
Keyphrases
  • cell cycle
  • circulating tumor
  • cell proliferation
  • cell free
  • single molecule
  • transcription factor
  • genome wide
  • gene expression
  • dna damage
  • fluorescent probe
  • sensitive detection
  • circulating tumor cells