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Two-ended recombination at a Flp-nickase-broken replication fork.

Rajula ElangoNamrata NilavarAndrew G LiErin E DuffeyYuning JiangDaniel NguyenAbdulkadir AbakirNicholas A WillisJonathan HouseleyRalph Scully
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Collision of a replication fork with a DNA nick is thought to generate a one-ended break, fostering genomic instability. Collision of the opposing converging fork with the nick could, in principle, form a second DNA end, enabling conservative repair by homologous recombination (HR). To study mechanisms of nickase-induced HR, we developed the Flp recombinase "step arrest" nickase in mammalian cells. Flp-nickase-induced HR entails two-ended, BRCA2/RAD51-dependent short tract gene conversion (STGC), BRCA2/RAD51-independent long tract gene conversion, and discoordinated two-ended invasions. HR induced by a replication-independent break and by the Flp-nickase differ in their dependence on BRCA1 . To determine the origin of the second DNA end during Flp-nickase-induced STGC, we blocked the opposing fork using a site-specific Tus/ Ter replication fork barrier. Flp-nickase-induced STGC remained robust and two-ended. Thus, collision of a single replication fork with a Flp-nick can trigger two-ended HR, possibly reflecting replicative bypass of lagging strand nicks. This response may limit genomic instability during replication of a nicked DNA template.
Keyphrases
  • high glucose
  • dna damage
  • dna repair
  • diabetic rats
  • copy number
  • circulating tumor
  • drug induced
  • oxidative stress
  • endothelial cells
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • breast cancer risk