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Structure-specific DNA replication-fork recognition directs helicase and replication restart activities of the PriA helicase.

Tricia A WindgassenMaxime LerouxKenneth A SatyshurSteven J SandlerJames L Keck
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2018)
DNA replication restart, the essential process that reinitiates prematurely terminated genome replication reactions, relies on exquisitely specific recognition of abandoned DNA replication-fork structures. The PriA DNA helicase mediates this process in bacteria through mechanisms that remain poorly defined. We report the crystal structure of a PriA/replication-fork complex, which resolves leading-strand duplex DNA bound to the protein. Interaction with PriA unpairs one end of the DNA and sequesters the 3'-most nucleotide from the nascent leading strand into a conserved protein pocket. Cross-linking studies reveal a surface on the winged-helix domain of PriA that binds to parental duplex DNA. Deleting the winged-helix domain alters PriA's structure-specific DNA unwinding properties and impairs its activity in vivo. Our observations lead to a model in which coordinated parental-, leading-, and lagging-strand DNA binding provide PriA with the structural specificity needed to act on abandoned DNA replication forks.
Keyphrases
  • circulating tumor
  • dna binding
  • cell free
  • single molecule
  • nucleic acid
  • circulating tumor cells
  • genome wide
  • high resolution