Smc5/6: a link between DNA repair and unidirectional replication?

JM Murray, AM Carr - Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2008 - nature.com
JM Murray, AM Carr
Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2008nature.com
Of the three structural maintenance of chromosome (SMC) complexes, two directly regulate
chromosome dynamics. The third, Smc5/6, functions mainly in homologous recombination
and in completing DNA replication. The literature suggests that Smc5/6 coordinates DNA
repair, in part through post-translational modification of uncharacterized target proteins that
can dictate their subcellular localization, and that Smc5/6 also functions to establish DNA-
damage-dependent cohesion. A nucleolar-specific Smc5/6 function has been proposed …
Abstract
Of the three structural maintenance of chromosome (SMC) complexes, two directly regulate chromosome dynamics. The third, Smc5/6, functions mainly in homologous recombination and in completing DNA replication. The literature suggests that Smc5/6 coordinates DNA repair, in part through post-translational modification of uncharacterized target proteins that can dictate their subcellular localization, and that Smc5/6 also functions to establish DNA-damage-dependent cohesion. A nucleolar-specific Smc5/6 function has been proposed because Smc5/6 yeast mutants display penetrant phenotypes of ribosomal DNA (rDNA) instability. rDNA repeats are replicated unidirectionally. Here, we propose that unidirectional replication, combined with global Smc5/6 functions, can explain the apparent rDNA specificity.
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