Holliday junction 

Holliday Junction
Molecular structure of a Holliday junction. From PDB 3CRX.

A Holliday junction is a mobile junction between four strands of DNA. The structure is named after Robin Holliday, who proposed it in 1964123 to account for a particular type of exchange of genetic information he observed in yeast known as homologous recombination. Holliday junctions are highly conserved structures, from prokaryotes to mammals.4

Because these junctions are between homologous sequences they can slide up and down the DNA. In bacteria, this sliding (or branch migration) is facilitated by the RuvABC complex or RecG protein, molecular motors that use the energy of ATP hydrolysis to push the junction around. The junction must then be resolved, split up, to restore 2 linear duplexes. This can be done to either restore the parental configuration or to establish a crossed over configuration. Resolution can occur in either a horizontal or vertical fashion during homologous recombination, giving patch products (if in same orientation during double strand break repair) or splice products (if in different orientations during double strand break repair).

Holliday junctions are an intermediate in genetic recombination which are also of importance in maintaining genomic integrity.51

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Stahl FW (1994). "The Holliday junction on its thirtieth anniversary" (PDF). Genetics 138 (2): 241-246. PMID 7828807, http://www.genetics.org/cgi/reprint/138/2/241. 
  2. ^ Liu Y, West S (2004). "Happy Hollidays: 40th anniversary of the Holliday junction". Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 5 (11): 937–44. doi:10.1038/nrm1502. PMID 15520813. 
  3. ^ Hays FA, Watson J, Ho PS (2003). "Caution! DNA Crossing: Crystal Structures of Holliday Junctions". J Biol Chem 278 (50): 49663–49666. doi:10.1074/jbc.R300033200. 
  4. ^ Constantinou A, Davies AA, West SC (2001). "Branch migration and Holliday junction resolution catalyzed by activities from mammalian cells". CELL 104 (2): 259-268. PMID 11207366. 
  5. ^ Fu TJ, Tse-Dinh YC, Seeman NC (1994). "Holliday junction crossover topology". J. Mol. Biol. 236 (1): 91-105. PMID 8107128. 

External links