Ayora S, Carrasco B, Cárdenas PP, César CE, Cañas C, Yadav T, Marchisone C, Alonso JC.

In Bacillus subtilis, this response can be subdivided into five general acts:
(1) recognition of the break site(s) and formation of a repair center (RC), which enables cells to commit to HR;
(2) end-processing of the broken end(s) by different avenues to generate a 3′-tailed duplex and RecN-mediated DSB ‘coordination’;
(3) loading of RecA onto single-strand DNA at the RecN-induced RC and concomitant DNA strand exchange;
(4) branch migration and resolution, or dissolution, of the recombination intermediates, and replication restart, followed by
(5) disassembly of the recombination apparatus formed at the dynamic RC and segregation of sister chromosomes.
When HR is impaired or an intact homologous template is not available, error-prone nonhomologous end-joining directly rejoins the two broken ends by ligation. In this review, we examine the functions that are known to contribute to DNA DSB repair in B. subtilis, and compare their properties with those of other bacterial phyla.