Roles of DNA helicases in the maintenance of genome integrity

Mol Cell Oncol. 2014 Oct 29;1(3):e963429. doi: 10.4161/23723548.2014.963429. eCollection 2014 Jul-Sep.

Abstract

Genome integrity is achieved and maintained by the sum of all of the processes in the cell that ensure the faithful duplication and repair of DNA, as well as its genetic transmission from one cell division to the next. As central players in virtually all of the DNA transactions that occur in vivo, DNA helicases (molecular motors that unwind double-stranded DNA to produce single-stranded substrates) represent a crucial enzyme family that is necessary for genomic stability. Indeed, mutations in many human helicase genes are linked to a variety of diseases with symptoms that can be generally described as genomic instability, such as predispositions to cancers. This review focuses on the roles of both DNA replication helicases and recombination/repair helicases in maintaining genome integrity and provides a brief overview of the diseases related to defects in these enzymes.

Keywords: DNA helicase; DnaB; MCM; Mcm2–7; Pif1; RecQ; Rothmund-Thomson syndrome; Twinkle; genome integrity.

Publication types

  • Review