A spontaneous Cdt1 mutation in 129 mouse strains reveals a regulatory domain restraining replication licensing

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Abstract

Cdt1 is required for loading the replicative DNA helicase MCM2/7, a process known as DNA replication licensing. Here we show that 129 mouse strains express a Cdt1 mutated allele with enhanced licensing activity. The mutation, named Δ 6 PEST, involves a six-amino acid deletion within a previously uncharacterized PEST-like domain. Cdt1 Δ 6 PEST and more extensive deletions exhibit increased re-replication and transformation activities that are independent of the Geminin and E3 ligase pathways. This PEST domain negatively regulates cell cycle-dependent chromatin recruitment of Cdt1 in G2/M phases of the cell cycle. Mass spectrometry analysis indicates that Cdt1 is phosphorylated at sites within the deleted PEST domain during mitosis. This study reveals a conserved new regulatory Cdt1 domain crucial for proper DNA licensing activity and suggests a mechanism by which the presence of Cdt1 in G2/M phases does not lead to premature origin licensing. These results also question the usage of 129 mouse strains for knockout analyses. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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Coulombe, P., Grégoire, D., Tsanov, N., & Méchali, M. (2013). A spontaneous Cdt1 mutation in 129 mouse strains reveals a regulatory domain restraining replication licensing. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3065

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