RTEL1


Description

The RTEL1 (regulator of telomere elongation helicase 1) is a protein-coding gene located on chromosome 20.

RTEL1 is an ATP-dependent DNA helicase that plays a crucial role in regulating telomere length, DNA repair, and maintaining genomic stability. It acts as an anti-recombinase to suppress harmful recombination events and limit crossovers during meiosis. RTEL1 controls meiotic recombination and crossover balance by physically separating strand invasion events, promoting noncrossover repair through meiotic synthesis-dependent strand annealing (SDSA) and dismantling D-loop recombination intermediates. Additionally, RTEL1 disassembles T-loops and prevents telomere fragility by counteracting telomeric G4-DNA structures, ensuring the dynamic stability of the telomere.

RTEL1 is also known as C20orf41, DKCA4, DKCB5, NHL, PFBMFT3, RTEL.

Associated Diseases


Disclaimer: The information provided here is not exhaustive by any means. Always consult your doctor or other qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition, procedure, or treatment, whether it is a prescription medication, over-the-counter drug, vitamin, supplement, or herbal alternative.