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The multifaceted functions of homologous recombination in dealing with replication-associated DNA damages

Shrena Chakraborty, Kamila Schirmeisen, Sarah Lambert

2023DNA repair43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The perturbation of DNA replication, a phenomena termed "replication stress", is a driving force of genome instability and a hallmark of cancer cells. Among the DNA repair mechanisms that contribute to tolerating replication stress, the homologous recombination pathway is central to the alteration of replication fork progression. In many organisms, defects in the homologous recombination machinery result in increased cell sensitivity to replication-blocking agents and a higher risk of cancer in humans. Moreover, the status of homologous recombination in cancer cells often correlates with the efficacy of anti-cancer treatment. In this review, we discuss our current understanding of the different functions of homologous recombination in fixing replication-associated DNA damage and contributing to complete genome duplication. We also examine which functions are pivotal in preventing cancer and genome instability.

Topics & Concepts

Homologous recombinationBiologyHomologous chromosomeGenome instabilityDNA repairGeneticsDNA replicationDNA re-replicationReplication protein AGenomeGene duplicationEukaryotic DNA replicationControl of chromosome duplicationDNADNA damageGeneDNA-binding proteinTranscription factorDNA Repair MechanismsPARP inhibition in cancer therapyCarcinogens and Genotoxicity Assessment
The multifaceted functions of homologous recombination in dealing with replication-associated DNA damages | Litcius