Failure to relax negative supercoiling of DNA is a primary cause of mitotic hyper-recombination in topoisomerase-deficient yeast cells.
In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, DNA topoisomerases I and II can functionally substitute for each other in removing positive and negative DNA supercoils. Yeast Delta top1 top2(ts) mutants grow slowly and present structural instability in the genome; over half of the rDNA repeats are excised in...
Main Authors: | Trigueros, S, Roca, J |
---|---|
Format: | Journal article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2002
|
Similar Items
-
Circular minichromosomes become highly recombinogenic in topoisomerase-deficient yeast cells.
by: Trigueros, S, et al.
Published: (2001) -
A GyrB-GyrA fusion protein expressed in yeast cells is able to remove DNA supercoils but cannot substitute eukaryotic topoisomerase II.
by: Trigueros, S, et al.
Published: (2002) -
Asymmetric removal of supercoils suggests how topoisomerase II simplifies DNA topology.
by: Trigueros, S, et al.
Published: (2004) -
The Effect of Dimethyl Sulfoxide on Supercoiled DNA Relaxation Catalyzed by Type I Topoisomerases
by: Lv, Bei, et al.
Published: (2015) -
mwr Xer site-specific recombination is hypersensitive to DNA supercoiling
by: Trigueros, S, et al.
Published: (2009)