Closing the DNA replication cycle: from simple circular molecules to supercoiled and knotted DNA catenanes

Author:

Schvartzman Jorge B1,Hernández Pablo1,Krimer Dora B1,Dorier Julien2ORCID,Stasiak Andrzej23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas (CSIC), Ramiro de Maeztu 9, 28040 Madrid, Spain

2. SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland

3. Center for Integrative Genomics, Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractDue to helical structure of DNA, massive amounts of positive supercoils are constantly introduced ahead of each replication fork. Positive supercoiling inhibits progression of replication forks but various mechanisms evolved that permit very efficient relaxation of that positive supercoiling. Some of these mechanisms lead to interesting topological situations where DNA supercoiling, catenation and knotting coexist and influence each other in DNA molecules being replicated. Here, we first review fundamental aspects of DNA supercoiling, catenation and knotting when these qualitatively different topological states do not coexist in the same circular DNA but also when they are present at the same time in replicating DNA molecules. We also review differences between eukaryotic and prokaryotic cellular strategies that permit relaxation of positive supercoiling arising ahead of the replication forks. We end our review by discussing very recent studies giving a long-sought answer to the question of how slow DNA topoisomerases capable of relaxing just a few positive supercoils per second can counteract the introduction of hundreds of positive supercoils per second ahead of advancing replication forks.

Funder

Spain’s Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades

Swiss National Science Foundation

Leverhulme Trust

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

Reference110 articles.

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