Joseph S. OsmundsonJayashree KumarRani YeungDuncan J. Smith
Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes two distinct Pif1-family helicases – Pif1 and Rrm3 – which have been reported to play distinct roles in numerous nuclear processes. Here, we systematically characterize the roles of Pif1 helicases in replisome progression and lagging-strand synthesis in S. cerevisiae. We demonstrate that either Pif1 or Rrm3 redundantly stimulate strand-displacement by DNA polymerase δ during lagging-strand synthesis. By analyzing replisome mobility in pif1 and rrm3 mutants, we show that Rrm3, with a partially redundant contribution from Pif1, suppresses widespread terminal arrest of the replisome at tRNA genes. Although both head-on and codirectional collisions induce replication fork arrest at tRNA genes, head-on collisions arrest a higher proportion of replisomes. Consistent with this observation, we find that head-on collisions between tRNA transcription and replication are under-represented in the S. cerevisiae genome. We demonstrate that tRNA-mediated arrest is R-loop independent, and propose that replisome arrest and DNA damage are mechanistically separable.
Joseph OsmundsonJayashree KumarRani YeungDuncan J. Smith
Phong Lan Thao TranThomas J. PohlChi-Fu ChenAngela ChanSebastian PottVirginia A. Zakian
Tom DeeganJonathan BaxterMaría Ángeles Ortiz-BazánJoseph T.P. YeelesKarim Labib
Zhi-Xiong ZhouCindy FollonierScott A. LujanAdam BurkholderVirginia A. ZakianThomas A. Kunkel
Paeschke, KatrinBochman, Matthew LGarcia, P DanielaCejka, PetrFriedman, Katherine LKowalczykowski, Stephen CZakian, Virginia A