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Common Fragile Sites Nested at the Interfaces of Early and Late-Replicating Chromosome Bands : Cis Acting Components of the G2/M Checkpoint?
Michelle Debatisse, Eliane El Achkar and Bernard Dutrillaux
volume 5 | issue 6
16 march 2006Pages: 578 - 581
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Common fragile sites (CFS) are evolutionary conserved loci where damage appears recurrently upon treatments perturbing DNA synthesis. Although long studied, the mechanisms underlying CFS fragility are still incompletely understood and CFS function is unknown. We have mapped most of them at the junction of chromosomal bands replicating at different times in S phase, indicating that specific replication programs take place at CFS. In good agreement with this finding, we obtained results suggesting that CFS remain incompletely replicated up to late G2, even in cells that went unperturbed through S phase. The recent demonstration that the function of ATR and its downstream targets are crucial to CFS stability may thereby indicate that mitotic onset is delayed until completion of their replication. Altogether, available results now suggest that CFS constitute integral “cis” components of the G2-M checkpoint.
We now provide open access to journal articles published online for one year or more. This article may be downloaded at the following link:
If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.




