bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology

Natural DNA copying errors help control chromosome end length in normal yeast

Updated

Abstract

Essence

Spontaneous replication fork collapse appears to create a major telomerase substrate that helps regulate telomere length in wild type budding yeast.

Evidence

Yeast molecular genetics experiments showed telomerase elongated collapsed-fork substrates at about 50% frequency and could add up to about 200 nucleotides in one cell division.

Caveat

The proposed model is based on budding yeast telomere replication and may not directly generalize to other eukaryotic systems.

Simplified

Full Text

Full text is available at the source.

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