MCM4/YPR019W Literature Guide Help

Other names published for MCM4: HCD21, CDC54, YPR019W

MCM4 - Cell Cycle Phase Involved (16)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Looke M, et al.  (2010) Relicensing of transcriptionally inactivated replication origins in budding yeast. J Biol Chem 285(51):40004-11
Suryadinata R, et al.  (2010) Control of cell cycle progression by phosphorylation of cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) substrates. Biosci Rep 30(4):243-55
Gambus A, et al.  (2009) A key role for Ctf4 in coupling the MCM2-7 helicase to DNA polymerase alpha within the eukaryotic replisome. EMBO J 28(19):2992-3004
Sullivan M, et al.  (2008) Cyclin-specific control of ribosomal DNA segregation. Mol Cell Biol 28(17):5328-36
Braun KA and Breeden LL  (2007) Nascent transcription of MCM2-7 is important for nuclear localization of the minichromosome maintenance complex in G1. Mol Biol Cell 18(4):1447-56
Gambus A, et al.  (2006) GINS maintains association of Cdc45 with MCM in replisome progression complexes at eukaryotic DNA replication forks. Nat Cell Biol 8(4):358-66
Jensen LJ, et al.  (2006) Co-evolution of transcriptional and post-translational cell-cycle regulation. Nature 443(7111):594-7
Sheu YJ and Stillman B  (2006) Cdc7-Dbf4 phosphorylates MCM proteins via a docking site-mediated mechanism to promote S phase progression. Mol Cell 24(1):101-13
Yu L, et al.  (2006) A survey of essential gene function in the yeast cell division cycle. Mol Biol Cell 17(11):4736-47
Liku ME, et al.  (2005) CDK phosphorylation of a novel NLS-NES module distributed between two subunits of the Mcm2-7 complex prevents chromosomal rereplication. Mol Biol Cell 16(10):5026-39
Mimura S, et al.  (2004) Phosphorylation-dependent binding of mitotic cyclins to Cdc6 contributes to DNA replication control. Nature 431(7012):1118-23
Tanaka S and Diffley JF  (2002) Interdependent nuclear accumulation of budding yeast Cdt1 and Mcm2-7 during G1 phase. Nat Cell Biol 4(3):198-207
Labib K, et al.  (2001) MCM2-7 proteins are essential components of prereplicative complexes that accumulate cooperatively in the nucleus during G1-phase and are required to establish, but not maintain, the S-phase checkpoint. Mol Biol Cell 12(11):3658-67
Nguyen VQ, et al.  (2001) Cyclin-dependent kinases prevent DNA re-replication through multiple mechanisms. Nature 411(6841):1068-73
Labib K, et al.  (2000) Uninterrupted MCM2-7 function required for DNA replication fork progression. Science 288(5471):1643-7
Moir D, et al.  (1982) Cold-sensitive cell-division-cycle mutants of yeast: isolation, properties, and pseudoreversion studies. Genetics 100(4):547-63