TAH11/YJR046W Literature Guide Help

Other names published for TAH11: SID2, CDT1, YJR046W

TAH11 - Strains/Constructs (13)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Liu C, et al.  (2012) Structural insights into the Cdt1-mediated MCM2-7 chromatin loading. Nucleic Acids Res 40(7):3208-17
Wu R, et al.  (2012) Cdt1p, through its interaction with Mcm6p, is required for the formation, nuclear accumulation and chromatin loading of the MCM complex. J Cell Sci 125(Pt 1):209-19
Takara TJ and Bell SP  (2011) Multiple Cdt1 molecules act at each origin to load replication-competent Mcm2-7 helicases. EMBO J 30(24):4885-96
Jee J, et al.  (2010) Structure and mutagenesis studies of the C-terminal region of licensing factor Cdt1 enable the identification of key residues for binding to replicative helicase Mcm proteins. J Biol Chem 285(21):15931-40
Lydeard JR, et al.  (2010) Break-induced replication requires all essential DNA replication factors except those specific for pre-RC assembly. Genes Dev 24(11):1133-44
Ma L, et al.  (2010) Identification of novel factors involved in or regulating initiation of DNA replication by a genome-wide phenotypic screen in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Cell Cycle 9(21):4399-410
Tsakraklides V and Bell SP  (2010) Dynamics of pre-replicative complex assembly. J Biol Chem 285(13):9437-43
Drury LS and Diffley JF  (2009) Factors affecting the diversity of DNA replication licensing control in eukaryotes. Curr Biol 19(6):530-5
Breslow DK, et al.  (2008) A comprehensive strategy enabling high-resolution functional analysis of the yeast genome. Nat Methods 5(8):711-8
Chen S, et al.  (2007) Orc6 is required for dynamic recruitment of Cdt1 during repeated Mcm2 7 loading. Genes Dev 21(22):2897-2907
Kawasaki Y, et al.  (2006) Reconstitution of Saccharomyces cerevisiae prereplicative complex assembly in vitro. Genes Cells 11(7):745-56
Jacobson MD, et al.  (2001) Mutations in SID2, a novel gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, cause synthetic lethality with sic1 deletion and may cause a defect during S phase. Genetics 159(1):17-33
Huang ME, et al.  (1997) Disruption of six novel yeast genes reveals three genes essential for vegetative growth and one required for growth at low temperature. Yeast 13(12):1181-94