Login / Signup

Moving forward one step back at a time: reversibility during homologous recombination.

Aurèle PiazzaWolf-Dietrich Heyer
Published in: Current genetics (2019)
DNA double-strand breaks are genotoxic lesions whose repair can be templated off an intact DNA duplex through the conserved homologous recombination (HR) pathway. Because it mainly consists of a succession of non-covalent associations of molecules, HR is intrinsically reversible. Reversibility serves as an integral property of HR, exploited and tuned at various stages throughout the pathway with anti- and pro-recombinogenic consequences. Here, we focus on the reversibility of displacement loops (D-loops), a central DNA joint molecule intermediate whose dynamics and regulation have recently been physically probed in somatic S. cerevisiae cells. From homology search to repair completion, we discuss putative roles of D-loop reversibility in repair fidelity and outcome.
Keyphrases
  • dna repair
  • circulating tumor
  • dna damage
  • cell free
  • single molecule
  • transcription factor
  • nucleic acid
  • microbial community
  • circulating tumor cells
  • gene expression
  • anti inflammatory