The rescue of stalled DNA replication forks is essential for cell viability. Impeded but still intact forks can be rescued by atypical DNA helicases in a reaction known as fork regression. This reaction has been studied at the single-molecule level using the DNA helicase RecG and, separately, using the eukaryotic SMARCAL1 enzyme. Both nanomachines possess the necessary activities to regress forks: they simultaneously couple DNA unwinding to duplex rewinding and the displacement of bound proteins. Furthermore, they can regress a fork into a Holliday junction structure, the central intermediate of many fork regression models. However, there are key differences between these two enzymes. RecG is monomeric and unidirectional, catalyzing an efficient and processive fork regression reaction and, in the process, generating a significant amount of force that is used to displace the tightly-bound SSB protein. In contrast, the inefficient SMARCAL1 is not unidirectional, displays limited processivity, and likely uses fork rewinding to facilitate RPA displacement. Like many other eukaryotic enzymes, SMARCAL1 may require additional factors and/or post-translational modifications to enhance its catalytic activity, whereas RecG can drive fork regression on its own.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23158613 | DOI Listing |
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int
December 2024
Department of Fisheries, University of Rajshahi, Rajshahi, 6205, Bangladesh.
The striped snakehead, Channa striata, is commercially and nutritionally important due to its medicinal properties, such as wound healing and antimicrobial abilities. This study investigated the reproductive biology of C. striata in relation to hydro-climatic changes using a fuzzy logic approach for long-term management in the wetland ecosystem (Gajner beel), Bangladesh.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
October 2024
Department of Geological & Environmental Sciences, Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina, United States of America.
Heleocola piceanus, a new, relatively large metatherian from Upper Cretaceous ('Edmontonian') strata of the Williams Fork Formation in northwestern Colorado is described, based on a recently discovered jaw fragment (MWC 9744), in addition to three isolated teeth initially referred by other studies to Aquiladelphis incus and Glasbius piceanus. Although sharing several morphologic characters with the Lancian genus Glasbius, H. piceanus lower molars are considerably larger than those of Glasbius and differ from the latter in lacking a buccal cingulid, possessing carnassiform notches on the cristid obliqua and entocristid, and bearing an entoconulid on m3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Sens
October 2024
Department of Applied Physics, Defence Institute of Advanced Technology (D.U.), Pune 411025, Maharashtra, India.
Diabetes Mellitus (DM), a widespread metabolic disorder, poses lifelong health implications, demanding timely diagnosis and cautious monitoring for effective disease management. Traditional blood glucose tests are invasive and require medical expertise for intermittent checking, motivating the investigation of alternative, noninvasive methods. This study introduces an approach employing breath analysis through a set of 12 quartz tuning fork-based sensors enhanced using nanomaterials and dedicated artificial neural network (ANN) algorithms for data interpretation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Metastasis Rev
December 2024
Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics (CBMG), Yenepoya Research Centre (YRC), Yenepoya (Deemed to be University), Mangalore, 575018, India.
MCM10 plays a vital role in genome duplication and is crucial for DNA replication initiation, elongation, and termination. It coordinates several proteins to assemble at the fork, form a functional replisome, trigger origin unwinding, and stabilize the replication bubble. MCM10 overexpression is associated with increased aggressiveness in breast, cervical, and several other cancers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLOS Water
March 2024
Department of Epidemiology and Environmental Health, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, United States of America.
To increase our understanding of the factors that influence formation of disinfection byproducts (DBPs) in rural drinking systems, we investigated the spatial and seasonal variation in trihalomethane (THM) and haloacetic acid (HAA) concentrations in relation to various chemical and physical variables in a rural public drinking water system in Martin County, Kentucky, USA. We collected drinking water samples from 97 individual homes over the course of one year and analyzed them for temperature, electrical conductivity, pH, free chlorine, total chlorine, THMs (chloroform, bromodichloromethane, dibromochloromethane, dichlorobromomethane, and bromoform) and HAAs (monochloroacetic acid, dichloroacetic acid, trichloroacetic acid, bromoacetic acid, and dibromoacetic acid). Spatial autocorrelation analysis showed only weak overall clustering for HAA concentrations and none for THMs.
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