An emerging picture of FANCJ's role in G4 resolution to facilitate DNA replication.
Robert M BroshYuliang WuPublished in: NAR cancer (2021)
A well-accepted hallmark of cancer is genomic instability, which drives tumorigenesis. Therefore, understanding the molecular and cellular defects that destabilize chromosomal integrity is paramount to cancer diagnosis, treatment and cure. DNA repair and the replication stress response are overarching paradigms for maintenance of genomic stability, but the devil is in the details. ATP-dependent helicases serve to unwind DNA so it is replicated, transcribed, recombined and repaired efficiently through coordination with other nucleic acid binding and metabolizing proteins. Alternatively folded DNA structures deviating from the conventional anti-parallel double helix pose serious challenges to normal genomic transactions. Accumulating evidence suggests that G-quadruplex (G4) DNA is problematic for replication. Although there are multiple human DNA helicases that can resolve G4 in vitro, it is debated which helicases are truly important to resolve such structures in vivo. Recent advances have begun to elucidate the principal helicase actors, particularly in cellular DNA replication. FANCJ, a DNA helicase implicated in cancer and the chromosomal instability disorder Fanconi Anemia, takes center stage in G4 resolution to allow smooth DNA replication. We will discuss FANCJ's role with its protein partner RPA to remove G4 obstacles during DNA synthesis, highlighting very recent advances and implications for cancer therapy.
Keyphrases
- nucleic acid
- single molecule
- circulating tumor
- papillary thyroid
- cell free
- dna repair
- copy number
- cancer therapy
- endothelial cells
- chronic kidney disease
- drug delivery
- hiv infected
- lymph node metastasis
- childhood cancer
- young adults
- binding protein
- human immunodeficiency virus
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- hepatitis c virus
- smoking cessation