About this Research Topic
Studies on replication barriers spark growing interest in the context of cancer therapy, as cancer cells heavily rely on DNA replication. Factors required for resolving and bypassing these obstacles become potential chemotherapy targets, but we are far from having a comprehensive understanding of the basic molecular mechanisms. The list of specific assays and methods to detect these barriers in cells is growing. These tools will be instrumental in identifying the factors that play a role in the response to replicative stress, as they will allow the identification of novel therapies for cancer.
In this Research topic, we will widely address replication barrier sensing, resolution, and bypass, with regard to the cellular response and factors involved, detection methods, and their limitations. We welcome original research, review articles, and technical manuscripts covering these topics:
• detection methods in cells
• signaling during DNA replication
• the role of non-coding RNAs in replication stress
• sensing and bypassing of DNA secondary structures and R-loops
• repair of interstrand crosslinks and DNA-protein crosslinks
• identification of novel factors involved in the response to replication stress and their use as potential biomarkers of cancer
• druggable targets and exploitation of defects in sensing and repair for chemotherapy
We accept different article types including Original Research articles, Mini-Reviews, Brief Research Reports, and Perspectives. A full list of accepted article types, including descriptions, can be found at this link.
Keywords: DNA replication barriers, DNA-protein crosslinks, DNA secondary structures, G-quadruplexes, Transcription-replication conflicts, R-loops, Cancer, Interstrand crosslinks
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.