Preventing DNA re-replication--divergent safeguards in yeast and metazoa.

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Abstract

Eukaryotes employ redundant mechanisms to limit the replication of genomic DNA to only once per cycle. These mechanisms prevent DNA re-replication by restricting the assembly of the pre-replication complex to the cell cycle stages of late mitosis and G1 phase so that the re-initiation of DNA replication cannot occur during S phase. Here we discuss the conserved yet divergent mechanisms of replication control employed in yeast and metazoan species, including a perspective on the newly uncovered role of the CUL-4 ubiquitin ligase as a central regulator of DNA replication in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans.

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Feng, H., & Kipreos, E. T. (2003). Preventing DNA re-replication--divergent safeguards in yeast and metazoa. Cell Cycle (Georgetown, Tex.), 2(5), 430–433. https://doi.org/10.4161/cc.2.5.527

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