There is increasing evidence that four-stranded Hoogsteen-bonded DNA structures, G4-DNA, play an important role in cellular processes such as meiosis and recombination. The Hoogsteen-bonded G4-DNA is thermodynamically more stable than duplex DNA, and many guanine-rich genomic DNA sequences with the ability to form G4-DNA have been identified. A protein-dependent activity that resolves G4-DNA into single-stranded DNA has been identified in human placental tissue. The resolvase activity was purified from any apparent nuclease activity and is dependent on NTP hydrolysis and MgCl 2 . Resolvase activity is optimal with 5 mM MgCl 2 . The V max /K m of ATP is 0.055%/min/ M, higher than the V max /K m of the other dNTPs. The products of the resolvase reaction are unmodified single-stranded DNA. The resolvase is not a duplex DNA helicase or a topoisomerase II activity and does not unwind Hoogsteenbonded triplex DNA. Resolvase is a novel activity that unwinds stable G4-DNA structures using a dNTPdependent mechanism producing unmodified singlestranded DNA. Potential in vivo roles for this G4-DNA resolvase activity are discussed.Guanine-rich DNA sequences that form G4-DNA are found in a number of evolutionarily conserved genomic regions such as telomeres, dimerization domains of retroviruses, and the insulin gene promoter (1-5). The four-stranded structure requires a monovalent cation to form, and the DNA strands can run in either a parallel or anti-parallel orientation (6 -8). G4-DNA contains Hoogsteen bonds between the guanine residues forming square planar guanine quartets (9). X-ray crystal diffraction and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance show the sugar backbone can exist in many variations (10 -12). Guanine quartets have unusual stacking energy and high stability. The ability of the O-6 of guanine to form a coordination complex with either Na ϩ or K ϩ in guanine quartets is thought to stabilize telomeres (6 -8). The thermodynamic parameters of parrellel-stranded G4-DNA are indicative of its stability with the free energy of formation equal to Ϫ21 kcal/mol and the transition temperature above 82°C (13). DNA sequences able to form G4-DNA have also been found at sites of spontaneous gene rearrangements, point mutations and, along with triplex DNA, have been implicated in causing DNA mutations (9, 14 -16).Many different proteins with specificity for binding to G4-DNA have been identified (17)(18)(19)(20)(21)(22). The identification of a G4-DNA-specific nuclease from yeast as the SEP1/KEM1 protein, and the meiotic block at the 4N stage for KEM1-null cells, supports the hypothesis that G4-DNA is involved in meiosis (23, 24, 9). More recently, two yeast gene products with specific activity for G4-DNA were cloned and sequenced, G4p1 and G4p2 (19, 20). G4p1 is a homodimer of the gene encoding a novel protein with a domain homologous to the bacterial methionyl-tRNA synthetase dimerization domains, and G4p2 is encoded by a gene identical to genes that appear to function in protein kinase-controlled signal transduction,...