1994
DOI: 10.1016/s0074-7696(08)62201-9
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Organization of Replication Units and DNA Replication in Mammalian Cells as Studied by DNA Fiber Radioautography

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Cited by 19 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…In agreement with this model, recent studies of living cells expressing GFP-tagged PCNA by using the fluorescence redistribution after photobleaching (FRAP) assay (Axelrod et al, 1976;Lippincott-Schwartz et al, 2001) showed that focal GFP-PCNA exchanged very slowly (Sporbert et al, 2002). During S phase, immobile GFP-PCNA foci can assemble and disassemble in the nucleus with lifetimes ranging from 30 min to 3 h (Leonhardt et al, 2000), consistent with significant heterogeneity of replication units and the existence of very large replicons (Liapunova, 1994). However, another replication protein, GFP-RPA34, was found to be mobile at RFi and after bleaching completely redistributed within 2 min (Sporbert et al, 2002).…”
supporting
confidence: 53%
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“…In agreement with this model, recent studies of living cells expressing GFP-tagged PCNA by using the fluorescence redistribution after photobleaching (FRAP) assay (Axelrod et al, 1976;Lippincott-Schwartz et al, 2001) showed that focal GFP-PCNA exchanged very slowly (Sporbert et al, 2002). During S phase, immobile GFP-PCNA foci can assemble and disassemble in the nucleus with lifetimes ranging from 30 min to 3 h (Leonhardt et al, 2000), consistent with significant heterogeneity of replication units and the existence of very large replicons (Liapunova, 1994). However, another replication protein, GFP-RPA34, was found to be mobile at RFi and after bleaching completely redistributed within 2 min (Sporbert et al, 2002).…”
supporting
confidence: 53%
“…This may be caused by a slow exchange of PCNA in the moving replication complex with free PCNA molecules or by de novo assembly of PCNA clamps within a single large focus (Sporbert et al, 2002). The lifetime of GFP-PCNA foci in mid-late S-phase cells can reach 3 h (Leonhardt et al, 2000), comparable with the lifetime of mammalian replicons in mid-late S phase, which is ϳ3.5 h (Liapunova, 1994).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…DNA that is replicated late in S phase contains genes that are usually transcriptionally inactive and arranged into highly structured, heterochromatic regions that differ from the topologically more accessible, early replicating and transcriptionally active DNA (64). This topology might dictate different replication machinery so as to navigate this highly structured DNA but not having to navigate through transcribing DNA.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, the rates of movement of replication forks differ, with late S phase supporting rates 2-3-fold faster than early S phase (reviewed in Ref. 64). A role for pol ⑀ in replication late in S phase would be consistent with the observation that temperature-sensitive mutants of the cat- alytic subunit of pol ⑀ in S. cerevisiae, when shifted to the non-permissive temperature, slow chromosomal DNA synthesis gradually until they arrest with 2C of DNA (9).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%