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1 erties, stimulates SSA activity and promotes strand invasion.
2 p2/Mnd1) that greatly enhances Dmc1-mediated strand invasion.
3 from two homologs anneal as a consequence of strand invasion.
4 ase triplet steps during the early stages of strand invasion.
5 buted in nature: single-strand annealing and strand invasion.
6 tion (HR), where it mediates RAD51-dependent strand invasion.
7 ciate with homologous donor sequences during strand invasion.
8 ctions, suggesting that Mnd1p is involved in strand invasion.
9 can make PNAs even more powerful agents for strand invasion.
10 an ideal substrate for RecA protein-promoted strand invasion.
11 hesize as little as 30 nucleotides following strand invasion.
12 relatively short hybrid regions, suggesting strand invasion.
13 clear periphery before Rad51 recruitment and strand invasion.
14 and annealing, often with multiple rounds of strand invasion.
15 that is competent for end resection but not strand invasion.
16 for a homologous donor sequence and promotes strand invasion.
17 rified HOP2 alone is proficient in promoting strand invasion.
18 ination, suggesting DNA end resection before strand invasion.
19 rified HOP2 alone is proficient in promoting strand invasion.
20 1/2 inhibitor-induced DNA lesions before DNA strand invasion.
21 nucleoprotein filaments that can mediate DNA strand invasion.
22 ed nucleosomes in the HML donor locus during strand invasion.
23 ns of recombination, homology search and DNA strand invasion.
24 DNA lesion bypass that is distinct from DNA strand invasion.
25 ilize long duplex donors that participate by strand invasion.
26 sults in a block to meiotic DSB repair after strand invasion.
27 responsible for key mechanistic steps during strand invasion.
28 replication restart by a mechanism involving strand invasion.
29 ppresses ssDNA annealing and facilitates DNA strand invasion.
30 ingle-strand DNA substrate for RecA-mediated strand invasion.
31 OH for all markers downstream of the site of strand invasion.
32 NA strand exchange proteins that mediate DNA strand invasion.
33 ble-stranded heteroduplex DNA product of DNA strand invasion.
34 mbination performing homology search and DNA strand invasion.
35 tein bound to the heteroduplex DNA after DNA strand invasion.
36 dges Rad51 from ssDNA preventing promiscuous strand invasions.
38 point mutation in Hop2 that dissociates its strand invasion activity from its ability to bind and an
41 ssDNA may explain its ability to enhance the strand invasion activity of the T4 recombinase (UvsX) an
44 ble-strand break (DSB) triggers HR repair by strand invasion also in BRCA2-defective cells, but less
45 e cells are not completely impaired in HR by strand invasion although the spontaneous HR rate is 10-f
46 nition by the U2 snRNP as a toehold-mediated strand invasion and advance an unanticipated drug target
48 ater step in homologous recombination, after strand invasion and before the initiation of new DNA syn
49 s process, PARP2 promotes DNA end resection, strand invasion and BIR-dependent mitotic DNA synthesis
52 way was considerably less active than single-strand invasion and did not contribute significantly to
53 nerate condensates, and we take advantage of strand invasion and displacement reactions to kineticall
54 single-stranded DNA (ssDNA), preventing DNA strand invasion and exchange by homologous recombination
57 Partner choice is determined at the time of strand invasion and is mediated by two recombinases: Rad
58 delays Rad51p binding to ssDNA and prevents strand invasion and localization of Rad51p to HML alpha.
59 dmc1Delta mutants are strongly defective in strand invasion and meiotic progression and that these d
60 filament engagement with the donor DNA, the strand invasion and pairing with the complementary seque
61 show that BIR synthesis initiates soon after strand invasion and proceeds more slowly than S-phase re
62 que recombination pathway dependent on Rad51 strand invasion and Rad52-Rad59 strand annealing activit
63 nduced in the palindrome promotes homologous strand invasion and repair synthesis, similar to mitotic
68 combinants (by single-strand annealing or by strand invasion) and to convert recombinational intermed
70 downstream HR steps of homology search, DNA strand invasion, and repair synthesis remain to be deter
72 nt background and was consistent with single-strand invasion/assimilation without mismatch correction
73 s a ssDNA-dependent ATPase that can catalyze strand invasion at both saturating and subsaturating con
74 sothermal nucleic acid amplification method, Strand Invasion-Based Amplification (SIBA), which exhibi
75 ctions that help ensure Dmc1-mediated stable strand invasion between homologous chromosomes, thereby
76 solution of complex entanglements (involving strand invasion between nonsister telomeres) requires ra
77 eveals that rad52-R70A cells can mediate DNA strand invasion but are unable to complete the recombina
79 Pol delta complex mutants are proficient for strand invasion but unable to complete extensive tracts
81 t of the designed peptide increases rates of strand invasion by 100-fold relative to unmodified bisPN
89 ein onto the DSB ends at MAT, the subsequent strand invasion by the Rad51 nucleoprotein filament into
91 ds inside bacteria clearly demonstrates that strand invasion can take place in a biologically relevan
94 uch that the C-terminal T5sequence forms the strand invasion complex, leaving the N-terminal T5sequen
97 p) is the product of homology search and DNA strand invasion, constituting a central intermediate in
98 RAD51-independent recombination by one-ended strand invasion coupled to DNA synthesis, followed by si
99 l for DSB-induced gene conversion in which a strand invasion creates a modified replication fork, inv
100 n concert with Rad51 and Dmc1 to promote the strand invasion (D-loop formation) step of homologous re
101 or gaps in nonsister homologous chromatids), strand invasion disparity, and different correction freq
103 ccumulating evidence for Rad51-catalyzed DNA strand invasion during double-strand break repair featur
104 the length of hDNA formed by the initiating strand invasion event determines susceptibility of the r
107 ant JM structures that result from secondary strand-invasion events and often require Mus81-Mms4 for
108 defect observed for rad51 mutants is due to strand invasion failure, whereas the Pol delta complex m
109 to a model where joining is initiated by 3' strand invasion followed by pairing to short repeat sequ
111 change proteins forming a nucleofilament for strand invasion, however, the function of the paralogues
113 meiotic recombination to promote homologous strand invasion in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerev
114 demonstrate that oligonucleotides promoting strand invasion in the DNA double helix can significantl
115 t study shows that beta protein can initiate strand invasion in vitro, as evidenced both by the forma
116 nd invasion, and moreover the suppression of strand invasion increased repair with oligonucleotides.
117 ws for the formation of the first detectable strand invasion intermediate (i.e., single-end invasion)
118 for BIR and gene conversion suggest a common strand invasion intermediate in these two recombinationa
119 ults show that WRN clearly prefers to act on strand invasion intermediates in a manner that favours s
120 nction is critical for stabilizing analogous strand invasion intermediates that exist in two separate
121 motif leads to failure in stabilizing early strand invasion intermediates, causing increased crossov
123 ly one free end and are thought to repair by strand invasion into a homologous duplex DNA followed by
124 th only one end available for repair undergo strand invasion into a homologous duplex DNA, followed b
125 this amplification: a facilitation of primer strand invasion into double-stranded DNA, and a suppress
133 , Ufd4/TRIP12, and Pep5/VPS11 compromise DNA strand invasion kinetics during homology-driven repair.
134 results can be explained by a model in which strand-invasion leading to gene conversion competes more
135 he structural results, TRF2 DBD stimulated a strand invasion-like reaction, associated with telomeric
140 e partially Mus81 dependent, suggesting that strand invasion occurs and the stalled intermediate is s
144 n single-stranded DNA, Rad52 likely promotes strand invasion of a double-stranded DNA molecule by sin
147 romosomes and that most replication involves strand invasion of internal regions by the ends of linea
148 mation, and (2) it suppresses Rad51-mediated strand invasion of sister chromatids via a Rad54-indepen
151 mbination at telomeres, leading to increased strand invasion of the 3' overhang within t-loop junctio
152 the cleaved recipient leading to homologous strand invasion of the donor allele, the assay was perfo
155 tly and energetically facilitates the direct strand invasion offered by collapse at positions +1 to +
159 can be directed to either Rad51-mediated DNA strand invasion or to Rad52-mediated DNA annealing.
162 ppear to be repaired primarily by the single-strand invasion pathway of homologous recombination.
164 22 appears to function outside of the single-strand invasion pathway, but levels of etoposide-induced
166 prepares the invading telomeric overhang for strand invasion, possibly through end processing or thro
167 rporates the well-established RecA-catalyzed strand invasion process with a novel stabilizing hybridi
169 The displacement loop (D loop) is a DNA strand invasion product formed during homologous recombi
171 protein, DMC1, promotes the formation of DNA strand invasion products (joint molecules) between homol
175 ecA family of recombinases catalyzes the DNA strand invasion reaction that takes place during homolog
176 ganisms employ RecA orthologues to guide the strand invasion reactions necessary for DNA recombinatio
179 es our results were consistent with separate strand invasion/resolution at the two ends of the target
184 tivity of RAD54 and the RAD51-RAD54-mediated strand invasion step during displacement loop formation.
185 up a defined in vitro system for the initial strand invasion step of double-strand break repair.
186 Snf is required earlier, at or preceding the strand invasion step of HR, while RSC is required follow
189 hat mimics an intermediate formed during the strand invasion step of many recombinational processes.
190 nce that the RecN protein stimulates the DNA strand invasion step of RecA-mediated recombinational DN
191 hows no intrinsic polarity preference at the strand invasion step that initiates double-strand break
192 These pathways share common features in the strand invasion steps, but differ in subsequent repair s
193 ys a central role in the homology search and strand invasion steps, DSBs either are not repaired or a
194 requency, or there is a separate pathway for strand invasion still functional in BRCA2-deficient cell
195 binding would also allow TRF2 to stabilize a strand invasion structure that is thought to exist at th
197 facilitates the recognition of duplex DNA by strand invasion, suggesting that antigene PNAs (agPNAs)
199 ouble-strand gap requires multiple cycles of strand invasion, synthesis, and dissociation of the nasc
200 tion requires much less homology (30 bp) for strand invasion than does RAD51-dependent repair (approx
201 These results suggest a minor pathway of strand invasion that is dependent on RAD52 but not on RA
203 esults and on the ability of TRF2 to mediate strand invasion, that TRF2 plays an essential role in HR
205 tly to clear Rad51 from DNA after successful strand invasion, thereby enabling the downstream events
206 s the aptamer P1 helix against central helix strand invasion, thus allowing the terminator to form.
207 takes place without double strand breaks or strand invasion, thus requiring some other mechanism for
208 this we show that in vitro Rad22 can promote strand invasion to form a D-loop that can be cleaved by
210 hat recombination begins with Rad51-mediated strand invasion to form DNA substrates that are matured
211 rt a model in which DmBlm acts downstream of strand invasion to unwind a D-loop intermediate to free
212 onucleotide conjugates initiate and maintain strand invasion under more stringent conditions than do
213 on permits the Rad51 proteins to promote DNA strand invasion using either 3'- or 5'-ends with similar
215 to the RecA-type recombinases that catalyze strand invasion via an active search for homology, ICP8
217 onal regulatory role for Rad51 following DNA strand invasion, where Rad51-double-stranded DNA may inh
219 and stabilization of stable (legitimate) DNA strand invasions, which suggests an intrinsic mechanism
223 on either 3' or 5'-ssDNA tails and promotes strand invasion without regard for the polarity of the t