The Xenopus egg extract has become the gold standard for in vitro studies of metazoan DNA replication. We have used this system to study the mechanisms that ensure rapid and complete DNA replication despite random initiation during Xenopus early development. To this end we adapted the DNA combi ...
Sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation is a powerful technique for fractionating macromolecules like DNA, RNA, and proteins. For this purpose, a sample containing a mixture of different size macromolecules is layered on the surface of a gradient whose density increases line ...
The identification and isolation of origins of replication from mammalian genomes has been a demanding task owing to the great complexity of these genomes. However, two methods have been refined in recent years each of which allows significant enrichment of recently activated origins of r ...
Effective experimental techniques are available to identify replication origin regions in eukaryotic cells. Genome-wide identification of the precise sequence elements that direct origin activity is however still not straightforward, even in the yeast Saccharomyces cer ...
Advances in microarray technology have enabled the analysis of replication dynamics on a genome-wide scale, providing deeper insight to the factors that regulate DNA replication. Studies using high-density microarrays have led to the genome-wide identification of replication ...
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) is a widely used method to study the interactions between proteins and discrete chromosomal loci in vivo. Originally, ChIP was developed for analysis of protein associations with DNA sequences known or suspected to bind the protein of interest. The ...
DNA replication studies often rely on analysis of replication intermediates, such as progressing replication forks and growing nascent strands. The assay presented here for replication at telomeres in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is based on the analysis of nascent DNA stran ...
A fundamental process in DNA replication is the disentangling of the two parental strands by DNA topoisomerases. In this chapter, I detail the topological analysis of plasmid replication intermediates using two-dimensional (2D) agarose gels. The method can resolve replication int ...
In order to perform 2-D gel analyses on restriction fragments from higher eukaryotic genomes, it is necessary to remove most of the linear, nonreplicating, fragments from the starting DNA preparation. This is so because the replication intermediates in a single-copy locus constitute such a ...
Duplication of eukaryotic chromosomes begins from multiple sites called origins of replication, with DNA synthesis proceeding bidirectionally away from the origin. There is little detailed information available pertaining to whether replication initiates at specific si ...
Extracts derived from Xenopus laevis eggs represent a powerful cell-free system to study eukaryotic DNA replication. A variation of the system allows for DNA replication not only in a cell-free environment, but also in the absence of a nucleus. In this nucleus-free system, DNA templates are lic ...
Genetic instability due to stalled replication forks is thought to underlie a number of human diseases, such as premature ageing and cancer susceptibility syndromes. In addition, site-specific stalling occurs at some genetic loci. A detailed understanding of the topology of the stall ...
The density transfer technique is a valuable tool to examine the progression of individual DNA replication forks. It is based on the transfer of cells from a medium containing dense isotopes to a medium with light (normal) isotopes (or vice versa), to obtain DNA sequences hybrid in density that can be i ...
Replication of chromosomes involves a variety of replication proteins including DNA polymerases, DNA helicases, and other accessory factors. Many of these proteins are known to localize at replication forks and travel with them as components of the replisome complex. Other proteins do ...
The sequencing of the human genome inaugurated a new era in both fundamental and applied genetics. At the same time, the emergence of new technologies for probing the genome has transformed the field of pharmaco-genetics and made personalized genomic profiling and high-throughput scree ...
We discuss the mechanisms regulating entry into and progression through S phase in eukaryotic cells. Methods to study the G1/S transition are briefly reviewed and an overview of G1/S-checkpoints is given, with particular emphasis on fission yeast. Thereafter we discuss different aspec ...
Bi-directionality is a common feature observed for genomic replication for all three phylogenetic kingdoms: Eubacteria, Archaea, and Eukaryotes. A consequence of bi-directional replication, where the two replication forks initiated at an origin move away from each other, is that the ...
DNA replication is a complex mechanism that functions due to the co-ordinated interplay of several dozen protein factors. In the last few years, numerous studies suggested a tight implication of DNA replication factors in several DNA transaction events that maintain the integrity of the g ...
DNA replication is fundamental to cellular life on earth, and replication initiation provides the primary point of control over this process. Replication initiation in all organisms involves the interaction of initiator proteins with one or more origins of replication in the DNA, with s ...
This chapter summarizes isolation procedures of four recombinant human proteins crucial for DNA replication: (a) the replicative DNA polymerase (pol) δ, (b) proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), (c) replication protein A (RP-A), and (d) replication factor C (RF-C). Pol δ is a four-subun ...