During the hours that human cells spend in the DNA synthesis (S) phase of the cell cycle, they may encounter adversities such as DNA damage or shortage of nucleotides. Under these stresses, replication forks in DNA may experience slowing, stalling, and breakage. Fork remodeling mechanisms, which stabilize slow or stalled replication forks and ensure their ability to continue or resume replication, protect cells from genomic instability and carcinogenesis. Fork remodeling includes DNA strand exchanges that result in annealing of newly synthesized strands (fork reversal), controlled DNA resection, and cleavage of DNA strands. Defects in major tumor suppressor genes BRCA1 and BRCA2, and a subset of the Fanconi Anemia genes have been shown to r...
Maintaining replication fork integrity is vital to preserve genomic stability and avoid cancer. Phys...
Accurate replication of the genome during cell division is essential for maintaining genome integrit...
DNA is the blueprint of life. It contains all the information necessary for the synthesis of protein...
A fundamental aspect of living organisms is the accurate replication and maintenance of the genome t...
The genome of eukaryotic cells is particularly at risk during the S phase of the cell cycle, when me...
Cells must replicate and segregate their DNA to daughter cells accurately to maintain genome stabili...
In growing cells, DNA replication precedes mitotic cell division to transmit genetic information to ...
Besides its role in homologous recombination, the tumor suppressor BRCA2 protects stalled replicatio...
During S phase, replication forks can encounter several obstacles that lead to fork stalling, which ...
Complete and accurate DNA replication requires the progression of replication forks through DNA dama...
DNA replication is a complex mechanism that functions due to the coordinated interplay of many facto...
Stalled replication forks occasionally collapse, leading to potentially catastrophic DNA double-stra...
DNA replication stress can stall replication forks, leading to genome instability. DNA damage tolera...
High-fidelity replication of DNA, and its accurate segregation to daughter cells, is critical for ma...
To ensure the completion of DNA replication and maintenance of genome integrity, DNA repair factors...
Maintaining replication fork integrity is vital to preserve genomic stability and avoid cancer. Phys...
Accurate replication of the genome during cell division is essential for maintaining genome integrit...
DNA is the blueprint of life. It contains all the information necessary for the synthesis of protein...
A fundamental aspect of living organisms is the accurate replication and maintenance of the genome t...
The genome of eukaryotic cells is particularly at risk during the S phase of the cell cycle, when me...
Cells must replicate and segregate their DNA to daughter cells accurately to maintain genome stabili...
In growing cells, DNA replication precedes mitotic cell division to transmit genetic information to ...
Besides its role in homologous recombination, the tumor suppressor BRCA2 protects stalled replicatio...
During S phase, replication forks can encounter several obstacles that lead to fork stalling, which ...
Complete and accurate DNA replication requires the progression of replication forks through DNA dama...
DNA replication is a complex mechanism that functions due to the coordinated interplay of many facto...
Stalled replication forks occasionally collapse, leading to potentially catastrophic DNA double-stra...
DNA replication stress can stall replication forks, leading to genome instability. DNA damage tolera...
High-fidelity replication of DNA, and its accurate segregation to daughter cells, is critical for ma...
To ensure the completion of DNA replication and maintenance of genome integrity, DNA repair factors...
Maintaining replication fork integrity is vital to preserve genomic stability and avoid cancer. Phys...
Accurate replication of the genome during cell division is essential for maintaining genome integrit...
DNA is the blueprint of life. It contains all the information necessary for the synthesis of protein...