PrimPol—A new polymerase on the block

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Abstract

The DNA-directed primase-polymerase PrimPol of the archaeo-eukaryotic primase superfamily represents an ancient solution to the many problems faced during genome duplication. This versatile enzyme is capable of initiating de novo DNA/RNA synthesis, DNA chain elongation, and has the capacity to bypass modifications that stall the replisome by trans-lesion synthesis or origin-independent re-priming, thus allowing discontinuous synthesis of the leading strand. Recent studies have shown that PrimPol is an important new player in replication fork progression in eukaryotic cells; this review summarizes our current understanding of PrimPol and highlights important questions that remain to be addressed.

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Rudd, S. G., Bianchi, J., & Doherty, A. J. (2014, June 16). PrimPol—A new polymerase on the block. Molecular and Cellular Oncology. Taylor and Francis Ltd. https://doi.org/10.4161/23723548.2014.960754

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