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Multi-step loading of human minichromosome maintenance proteins in live human cells

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Multi-step loading of human minichromosome maintenance proteins in live human cells. / Symeonidou, I.-E.; Kotsantis, P.; Roukos, V. et al.
In: Journal of Biological Chemistry, Vol. 288, No. 50, 31.12.2013, p. 35852-35867.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Symeonidou, I-E, Kotsantis, P, Roukos, V, Rapsomaniki, M-A, Grecco, HE, Bastiaens, P, Taraviras, S & Lygerou, Z 2013, 'Multi-step loading of human minichromosome maintenance proteins in live human cells', Journal of Biological Chemistry, vol. 288, no. 50, pp. 35852-35867. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M113.474825

APA

Symeonidou, I.-E., Kotsantis, P., Roukos, V., Rapsomaniki, M.-A., Grecco, H. E., Bastiaens, P., Taraviras, S., & Lygerou, Z. (2013). Multi-step loading of human minichromosome maintenance proteins in live human cells. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 288(50), 35852-35867. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M113.474825

Vancouver

Symeonidou IE, Kotsantis P, Roukos V, Rapsomaniki MA, Grecco HE, Bastiaens P et al. Multi-step loading of human minichromosome maintenance proteins in live human cells. Journal of Biological Chemistry. 2013 Dec 31;288(50):35852-35867. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M113.474825

Author

Symeonidou, I.-E. ; Kotsantis, P. ; Roukos, V. et al. / Multi-step loading of human minichromosome maintenance proteins in live human cells. In: Journal of Biological Chemistry. 2013 ; Vol. 288, No. 50. pp. 35852-35867.

Bibtex

@article{6c4b1ddb926c477fb5b1b37a01b09656,
title = "Multi-step loading of human minichromosome maintenance proteins in live human cells",
abstract = "Once-per-cell cycle replication is regulated through the assembly onto chromatin of multisubunit protein complexes that license DNA for a further round of replication. Licensing consists of the loading of the hexameric MCM2–7 complex onto chromatin during G1 phase and is dependent on the licensing factor Cdt1. In vitro experiments have suggested a two-step binding mode for minichromosome maintenance (MCM) proteins, with transient initial interactions converted to stable chromatin loading. Here, we assess MCM loading in live human cells using an in vivo licensing assay on the basis of fluorescence recovery after photobleaching of GFP-tagged MCM protein subunits through the cell cycle. We show that, in telophase, MCM2 and MCM4 maintain transient interactions with chromatin, exhibiting kinetics similar to Cdt1. These are converted to stable interactions from early G1 phase. The immobile fraction of MCM2 and MCM4 increases during G1 phase, suggestive of reiterative licensing. In late G1 phase, a large fraction of MCM proteins are loaded onto chromatin, with maximal licensing observed just prior to S phase onset. Fluorescence loss in photobleaching experiments show subnuclear concentrations of MCM-chromatin interactions that differ as G1 phase progresses and do not colocalize with sites of DNA synthesis in S phase.",
author = "I.-E. Symeonidou and P. Kotsantis and V. Roukos and M.-A. Rapsomaniki and H.E. Grecco and P. Bastiaens and S. Taraviras and Z. Lygerou",
year = "2013",
month = dec,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1074/jbc.M113.474825",
language = "English",
volume = "288",
pages = "35852--35867",
journal = "Journal of Biological Chemistry",
issn = "0021-9258",
publisher = "American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Inc.",
number = "50",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Multi-step loading of human minichromosome maintenance proteins in live human cells

AU - Symeonidou, I.-E.

AU - Kotsantis, P.

AU - Roukos, V.

AU - Rapsomaniki, M.-A.

AU - Grecco, H.E.

AU - Bastiaens, P.

AU - Taraviras, S.

AU - Lygerou, Z.

PY - 2013/12/31

Y1 - 2013/12/31

N2 - Once-per-cell cycle replication is regulated through the assembly onto chromatin of multisubunit protein complexes that license DNA for a further round of replication. Licensing consists of the loading of the hexameric MCM2–7 complex onto chromatin during G1 phase and is dependent on the licensing factor Cdt1. In vitro experiments have suggested a two-step binding mode for minichromosome maintenance (MCM) proteins, with transient initial interactions converted to stable chromatin loading. Here, we assess MCM loading in live human cells using an in vivo licensing assay on the basis of fluorescence recovery after photobleaching of GFP-tagged MCM protein subunits through the cell cycle. We show that, in telophase, MCM2 and MCM4 maintain transient interactions with chromatin, exhibiting kinetics similar to Cdt1. These are converted to stable interactions from early G1 phase. The immobile fraction of MCM2 and MCM4 increases during G1 phase, suggestive of reiterative licensing. In late G1 phase, a large fraction of MCM proteins are loaded onto chromatin, with maximal licensing observed just prior to S phase onset. Fluorescence loss in photobleaching experiments show subnuclear concentrations of MCM-chromatin interactions that differ as G1 phase progresses and do not colocalize with sites of DNA synthesis in S phase.

AB - Once-per-cell cycle replication is regulated through the assembly onto chromatin of multisubunit protein complexes that license DNA for a further round of replication. Licensing consists of the loading of the hexameric MCM2–7 complex onto chromatin during G1 phase and is dependent on the licensing factor Cdt1. In vitro experiments have suggested a two-step binding mode for minichromosome maintenance (MCM) proteins, with transient initial interactions converted to stable chromatin loading. Here, we assess MCM loading in live human cells using an in vivo licensing assay on the basis of fluorescence recovery after photobleaching of GFP-tagged MCM protein subunits through the cell cycle. We show that, in telophase, MCM2 and MCM4 maintain transient interactions with chromatin, exhibiting kinetics similar to Cdt1. These are converted to stable interactions from early G1 phase. The immobile fraction of MCM2 and MCM4 increases during G1 phase, suggestive of reiterative licensing. In late G1 phase, a large fraction of MCM proteins are loaded onto chromatin, with maximal licensing observed just prior to S phase onset. Fluorescence loss in photobleaching experiments show subnuclear concentrations of MCM-chromatin interactions that differ as G1 phase progresses and do not colocalize with sites of DNA synthesis in S phase.

U2 - 10.1074/jbc.M113.474825

DO - 10.1074/jbc.M113.474825

M3 - Journal article

VL - 288

SP - 35852

EP - 35867

JO - Journal of Biological Chemistry

JF - Journal of Biological Chemistry

SN - 0021-9258

IS - 50

ER -