Abstract

Bloom syndrome is a rare autosomal disorder characterized by predisposition to cancer and genomic instability. BLM, the structural gene mutated in individuals with the disorder, encodes a DNA helicase belonging to the RecQ family of helicases. These helicases have been established to serve roles in both promoting and preventing recombination. Mounting evidence has implicated a function for BLM during DNA replication; specifically, BLM might be involved in rescuing stalled or collapsed replication forks by a recombination-based mechanism. We have tested this idea by examining the binding and melting activity of BLM on oligonucleotide substrates containing D-loops, DNA structures that model the presumed initial intermediate formed during homologous recombination. We find that BLM preferentially melts those D-loops that are formed more favorably by the strand exchange protein Rad51, but whose polarity could be less favorable for enabling restoration of an active replication fork. We propose a model in which BLM selectively dissociates recombination intermediates likely to be unfavorable for recombination-promoted replication.

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