Recommend Cell Cycle to your librarian for 2008. Download form here.

Sign up for Table of Contents Alerts.

home subscribe search archive forthcoming

Email this page Print this page

Perspectives

Is There A Pre-RC Checkpoint That Cancer Cells Lack?

Eric Lau and Wei Jiang

volume 5 | issue 15

1 august 2006
Pages: 1602 - 1606

We now provide open access to journal articles published online for one year or more. This article may be downloaded at the following link:
 Download PDF

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.

Critical for genomic integrity, accurate DNA replication is tightly regulated by the convergence of prereplication protein complexes (pre-RCs) to “license” replicating origins on DNA in G1 and is activated by S-phase promoting kinases that selectively target and trigger origin firing in S-phase. To present, a checkpoint mechanism monitoring pre-RC complex formation and activation has yet to be elucidated. However, perturbation of these protein complexes has yielded divergent phenotypes in recent reports: normal cells arrest in the cell cycle, whereas cancerous cells arrest and die. These data implicate a mechanism by which normal cells sense pre-RC deficiency and then signal for cell cycle arrest. The potential for therapeutic exploits of this disparity between normal and cancer cells is apparent. Here, we explore recent data supporting the existence of a pre-RC checkpoint that ensures faithful pre-RC formation, a cell cycle mechanism that is intriguingly compromised in cancer cells.



We now provide open access to journal articles published online for one year or more. This article may be downloaded at the following link:
 Download PDF

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.