posted on 2025-07-10, 13:47authored byAgostina P Bertolin, Berta Canal, Mona Yekezare, Anne Early, Jingkun Zeng, Rachael Instrell, Michael Howell, John FX Diffley
The DNA replication checkpoint is crucial for maintaining genome stability after genotoxic stress; without it, stalled DNA replication forks cannot restart normally, excess DNA replication origins are activated, DNA damage and single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) accumulate, S phase does not finish, and cells die. Preventing excess origin firing suppresses all these effects. Here, we show in human cells that when replication is not restrained by a functional checkpoint, excess DNA synthesis sequesters the processivity factor PCNA and its loader, replication factor C (RFC), preventing normal fork restart. Nascent DNA ends unprotected by RFC/PCNA are attacked by the helicase-like transcription factor (HLTF), causing irreversible replication fork collapse and hyperaccumulation of ssDNA. This explains how the checkpoint stabilizes stalled replication forks and has implications for how origin firing is normally coordinated with fork progression. Loss of HLTF suppresses fork collapse and cell lethality in checkpoint-deficient cells, which has implications for how resistance to anti-checkpoint therapies may arise.
Funding
Crick (Grant ID: CC2002, Grant title: Diffley CC2002)
Crick (Grant ID: CC1071, Grant title: STP High Throughput Screening)
European Research Council (Grant ID: 669424 - CHROMOREP, Grant title: ERC 669424 - CHROMOREP)
Wellcome Trust (Grant ID: 106252/Z/14/Z, Grant title: WT 106252/Z/14/Z)
Wellcome Trust (Grant ID: 219527/Z/19/Z, Grant title: WT 219527/Z/19/Z)