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Consequences of partial chromosome re-replication in mammalian cells

To prevent re-replication of DNA in a single cell cycle, the licensing of replication origins by Mcm2-7 is prevented during S and G2 phases. Metazoans achieve this by cell cycle regulated proteolysis of the essential licensing factor Cdt1 and formation of an inhibitory heterohexameric complex of Cdt1 with a small protein called geminin. The consequences of either stabilising Cdt1 or ablating geminin in synchronised human U2OS cells are investigated in this PhD Thesis to elucidate the possible contribution of re-replication in gene amplifications or rearrangements commonly seen in human tumours. I show that following geminin loss, cells complete an apparently normal S-phase, but a proportion arrests at the G2/M boundary. When Cdt1 starts to accumulate in these cells, DNA re-replicates, suggesting that the key role of geminin is to prevent re-licensing in G2. Inhibition of cell cycle checkpoints in cells lacking geminin promotes progression through mitosis without detectable levels of re-replication. Checkpoint kinases thereby amplify re-replication into an all-or-nothing response by delaying geminin depleted cells in G2 phase. Comparative Genomic Hybridisation (CGH) array and Solexa Deep DNA sequencing revealed that re-replication after geminin depletion does not appear at preferential genomic regions within the human genome. This is consistent with a recent observation that G2 cells have lost their replication timing information and reduplicate their genome stochastically. In contrast, when Cdt1 is stabilised by the neddylation inhibitor MLN4924, re-replication starts directly from within S-phase raising the question whether alternative mechanisms of may cause distinct genomic consequences.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:578910
Date January 2013
CreatorsKlotz-Noack, Kathleen
ContributorsBlow, John
PublisherUniversity of Dundee
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttps://discovery.dundee.ac.uk/en/studentTheses/11c776ae-8192-4993-b317-7eb27d8dbf49

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