RTS1—an eukaryotic terminator of replication

2002 
Abstract Eukaryotic replication termination generally occurs randomly in the region between two active origins. However, termination, or pausing of the replication forks has been observed at specific loci. Recently, a site-specific terminator of replication named RTS1 was shown to play an important role in mating-type switching in Schizosaccharomyces pombe . Mating-type switching in S. pomb e relies on an imprinting event that chemically modifies one strand of the DNA at the mating-type locus mat1 . This imprint, that is formed only when mat1 is replicated in a specific direction, marks the DNA for a rearrangement leading to mating-type switching. The RTS1 element ensures that mat1 is replicated in the correct direction for imprinting and initiation of the subsequent mating-type switching event. This is the first replication terminator shown to play a role in cellular differentiation.
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