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Functional domains of the Xenopus replication licensing factor Cdt1

During late mitosis and early G1, replication origins are licensed for subsequent replication by loading heterohexamers of the mini-chromosome maintenance proteins (Mcm2-7). To prevent re-replication of DNA, the licensing system is down-regulated at other cell cycle stages. A small protein called ge...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ferenbach, Andrew, Li, Anatoliy, Brito-Martins, Marta, Blow, J. Julian
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC546161/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15653632
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki176
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author Ferenbach, Andrew
Li, Anatoliy
Brito-Martins, Marta
Blow, J. Julian
author_facet Ferenbach, Andrew
Li, Anatoliy
Brito-Martins, Marta
Blow, J. Julian
author_sort Ferenbach, Andrew
collection PubMed
description During late mitosis and early G1, replication origins are licensed for subsequent replication by loading heterohexamers of the mini-chromosome maintenance proteins (Mcm2-7). To prevent re-replication of DNA, the licensing system is down-regulated at other cell cycle stages. A small protein called geminin plays an important role in this down-regulation by binding and inhibiting the Cdt1 component of the licensing system. We examine here the organization of Xenopus Cdt1, delimiting regions of Cdt1 required for licensing and regions required for geminin interaction. The C-terminal 377 residues of Cdt1 are required for licensing and the extreme C-terminus contains a domain that interacts with an Mcm(2,4,6,7) complex. Two regions of Cdt1 interact with geminin: one at the N-terminus, and one in the centre of the protein. Only the central region binds geminin tightly enough to successfully compete with full-length Cdt1 for geminin binding. This interaction requires a predicted coiled-coil domain that is conserved amongst metazoan Cdt1 homologues. Geminin forms a homodimer, with each dimer binding one molecule of Cdt1. Separation of the domains necessary for licensing activity from domains required for a strong interaction with geminin generated a construct, whose licensing activity was partially insensitive to geminin inhibition.
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spelling pubmed-5461612005-02-07 Functional domains of the Xenopus replication licensing factor Cdt1 Ferenbach, Andrew Li, Anatoliy Brito-Martins, Marta Blow, J. Julian Nucleic Acids Res Article During late mitosis and early G1, replication origins are licensed for subsequent replication by loading heterohexamers of the mini-chromosome maintenance proteins (Mcm2-7). To prevent re-replication of DNA, the licensing system is down-regulated at other cell cycle stages. A small protein called geminin plays an important role in this down-regulation by binding and inhibiting the Cdt1 component of the licensing system. We examine here the organization of Xenopus Cdt1, delimiting regions of Cdt1 required for licensing and regions required for geminin interaction. The C-terminal 377 residues of Cdt1 are required for licensing and the extreme C-terminus contains a domain that interacts with an Mcm(2,4,6,7) complex. Two regions of Cdt1 interact with geminin: one at the N-terminus, and one in the centre of the protein. Only the central region binds geminin tightly enough to successfully compete with full-length Cdt1 for geminin binding. This interaction requires a predicted coiled-coil domain that is conserved amongst metazoan Cdt1 homologues. Geminin forms a homodimer, with each dimer binding one molecule of Cdt1. Separation of the domains necessary for licensing activity from domains required for a strong interaction with geminin generated a construct, whose licensing activity was partially insensitive to geminin inhibition. Oxford University Press 2005 2005-01-13 /pmc/articles/PMC546161/ /pubmed/15653632 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki176 Text en © 2005, the authors Nucleic Acids Research, Vol. 33 No. 1 © Oxford University Press 2005; all rights reserved
spellingShingle Article
Ferenbach, Andrew
Li, Anatoliy
Brito-Martins, Marta
Blow, J. Julian
Functional domains of the Xenopus replication licensing factor Cdt1
title Functional domains of the Xenopus replication licensing factor Cdt1
title_full Functional domains of the Xenopus replication licensing factor Cdt1
title_fullStr Functional domains of the Xenopus replication licensing factor Cdt1
title_full_unstemmed Functional domains of the Xenopus replication licensing factor Cdt1
title_short Functional domains of the Xenopus replication licensing factor Cdt1
title_sort functional domains of the xenopus replication licensing factor cdt1
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC546161/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15653632
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki176
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