|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Rif1 provides a new DNA-binding interface for the Bloom syndrome complex to maintain normal replication.

First Author  Xu D Year  2010
Journal  EMBO J Volume  29
Issue  18 Pages  3140-55
PubMed ID  20711169 Mgi Jnum  J:164394
Mgi Id  MGI:4833753 Doi  10.1038/emboj.2010.186
Citation  Xu D, et al. (2010) Rif1 provides a new DNA-binding interface for the Bloom syndrome complex to maintain normal replication. EMBO J 29(18):3140-55
abstractText  BLM, the helicase defective in Bloom syndrome, is part of a multiprotein complex that protects genome stability. Here, we show that Rif1 is a novel component of the BLM complex and works with BLM to promote recovery of stalled replication forks. First, Rif1 physically interacts with the BLM complex through a conserved C-terminal domain, and the stability of Rif1 depends on the presence of the BLM complex. Second, Rif1 and BLM are recruited with similar kinetics to stalled replication forks, and the Rif1 recruitment is delayed in BLM-deficient cells. Third, genetic analyses in vertebrate DT40 cells suggest that BLM and Rif1 work in a common pathway to resist replication stress and promote recovery of stalled forks. Importantly, vertebrate Rif1 contains a DNA-binding domain that resembles the alphaCTD domain of bacterial RNA polymerase alpha; and this domain preferentially binds fork and Holliday junction (HJ) DNA in vitro and is required for Rif1 to resist replication stress in vivo. Our data suggest that Rif1 provides a new DNA-binding interface for the BLM complex to restart stalled replication forks.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

1 Bio Entities

0 Expression