Other names published for MCM4: HCD21, CDC54, YPR019W
MCM4 LITERATURE TOPICS
- Curated Literature
- Genetics/Cell Biology
- Cell Cycle Phase Involved
- Cellular Location
- Function/Process
- Genetic Interactions
- Mutants/Phenotypes
- Regulation of
- Regulatory Role
- Nucleic Acid Information
- Gene Product Information
- Related Genes/Proteins
- Research Aids
- Genome-wide Analysis
- Proteome-wide Analysis
- Other Topics
- Additional Information
MCM4 - Genetic Interactions (15)
| Reference | Other Genes Addressed |
|---|---|
| Li XC and Tye BK (2011) Ploidy Dictates Repair Pathway Choice under DNA Replication Stress. Genetics 187(4):1031-40 | |
| Randell JC, et al. (2010) Mec1 is one of multiple kinases that prime the Mcm2-7 helicase for phosphorylation by Cdc7. Mol Cell 40(3):353-63 | |
| Sheu YJ and Stillman B (2010) The Dbf4-Cdc7 kinase promotes S phase by alleviating an inhibitory activity in Mcm4. Nature 463(7277):113-7 | |
| Bochman ML, et al. (2008) Subunit organization of Mcm2-7 and the unequal role of active sites in ATP hydrolysis and viability. Mol Cell Biol 28(19):5865-73 | |
| Devault A, et al. (2008) Interplay between S-Cyclin-dependent Kinase and Dbf4-dependent Kinase in Controlling DNA Replication through Phosphorylation of Yeast Mcm4 N-Terminal Domain. Mol Biol Cell 19(5):2267-77 | |
| Leon RP, et al. (2008) Functional Conservation of {beta}-Hairpin DNA Binding Domains in the Mcm Protein of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum and the Mcm5 protein of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Genetics 179(4):1757-68 | |
| Bochman ML and Schwacha A (2007) Differences in the single-stranded DNA binding activities of MCM2-7 and MCM467: MCM2 and MCM5 define a slow ATP-dependent step. J Biol Chem 282(46):33795-804 | |
| 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 | |
| Davierwala AP, et al. (2005) The synthetic genetic interaction spectrum of essential genes. Nat Genet 37(10):1147-52 | |
| Zou L, et al. (1997) CDC45, a novel yeast gene that functions with the origin recognition complex and Mcm proteins in initiation of DNA replication. Mol Cell Biol 17(2):553-63 | |
| Loo S, et al. (1995) The origin recognition complex in silencing, cell cycle progression, and DNA replication. Mol Biol Cell 6(6):741-56 | |
| Whitbread LA and Dalton S (1995) Cdc54 belongs to the Cdc46/Mcm3 family of proteins which are essential for initiation of eukaryotic DNA replication. Gene 155(1):113-7 | |
| Chen Y, et al. (1992) CDC46/MCM5, a yeast protein whose subcellular localization is cell cycle-regulated, is involved in DNA replication at autonomously replicating sequences. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 89(21):10459-63 | |
| Hennessy KM, et al. (1991) A group of interacting yeast DNA replication genes. Genes Dev 5(6):958-69 | |
| Moir D, et al. (1982) Cold-sensitive cell-division-cycle mutants of yeast: isolation, properties, and pseudoreversion studies. Genetics 100(4):547-63 |




