Elsevier

DNA Repair

Volume 105, September 2021, 103163
DNA Repair

Daughter-strand gaps in DNA replication – substrates of lesion processing and initiators of distress signalling,☆☆

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dnarep.2021.103163Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Daughter-strand gaps emerge from repriming of stalled replication forks.

  • Postreplicative DNA damage bypass separates lesion processing from replisome progression.

  • Daughter-strand gaps are key modulators of the replication stress response.

Abstract

Dealing with DNA lesions during genome replication is particularly challenging because damaged replication templates interfere with the progression of the replicative DNA polymerases and thereby endanger the stability of the replisome. A variety of mechanisms for the recovery of replication forks exist, but both bacteria and eukaryotic cells also have the option of continuing replication downstream of the lesion, leaving behind a daughter-strand gap in the newly synthesized DNA. In this review, we address the significance of these single-stranded DNA structures as sites of DNA damage sensing and processing at a distance from ongoing genome replication. We describe the factors controlling the emergence of daughter-strand gaps from stalled replication intermediates, the benefits and risks of their expansion and repair via translesion synthesis or recombination-mediated template switching, and the mechanisms by which they activate local as well as global replication stress signals. Our growing understanding of daughter-strand gaps not only identifies them as targets of fundamental genome maintenance mechanisms, but also suggests that proper control over their activities has important practical implications for treatment strategies and resistance mechanisms in cancer therapy.

Keywords

Checkpoint
Daughter-strand gaps
DNA replication stress
DNA damage signalling
DNA damage bypass
Single-stranded DNA

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This Special Issue is edited by P.A. Jeggo.

☆☆

This article is part of the special issue Cutting Edge Perspectives in Genome Maintenance VIII.