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1 lyzed the consequences of PDS5 depletion for DNA replication.
2 capsid protein (VP)-encoding mRNAs and viral DNA replication.
3 ) of USP13; and occurs preferentially during DNA replication.
4 chromatids precisely as they are born during DNA replication.
5 er eukaryotic cell-cycle kinases controlling DNA replication.
6 nd strength, biological motor operation, and DNA replication.
7 histone chaperone, as FACT also functions in DNA replication.
8 ped proteins that increase the efficiency of DNA replication.
9 ll-cycle progression, DNA damage repair, and DNA replication.
10 reestablish centromeric chromatin following DNA replication.
11 nce protein complex, around DNA and initiate DNA replication.
12 or ICL repair in metazoans and is coupled to DNA replication.
13 nimise replication stress and promote normal DNA replication.
14 /G2 phase to ensure adequate dNTP supply for DNA replication.
15 quadruplex regions that impede mitochondrial DNA replication.
16 etic and mechanistic basis for high-fidelity DNA replication.
17 r maintaining sufficient dNTPs during normal DNA replication.
18 o interact with treslin, leading to enhanced DNA replication.
19 the leading strand, which is dispensable for DNA replication.
20 lity of Orc6 and result in reduced levels of DNA replication.
21 PHF8 regulates TopBP1 stability to maintain DNA replication.
22 shment of the methylation sequence following DNA replication.
23 ut little is known about its dynamics during DNA replication.
24 including Topoisomerase-DNA adducts, during DNA replication.
25 and associates with proteins known to act in DNA replication.
26 pre-replicative complex and is essential for DNA replication.
27 catenated circular chromosomes generated by DNA replication.
28 ruitment of replication factor C to initiate DNA replication.
29 y introducing nicking damage to impair phage DNA replication.
30 d secondary structures, gene expression, and DNA replication.
31 2/NuRD to transcriptionally silence REs post-DNA replication.
32 ntial A protein that mediates rolling-circle DNA replication.
33 cell cycle activation, immune responses and DNA replication.
34 11, 17, 20, and 58 inhibit later steps after DNA replication.
35 ction in helping to clear R-loops that block DNA replication.
36 s residence time on chromatin and slows down DNA replication.
37 hat also have the potential to impede timely DNA replication.
38 NA, epigenetic maintenance and regulation of DNA replication.
39 1) phase causes an early switch and inhibits DNA replication.
40 e, we report that TtAgo also participates in DNA replication.
41 ular insights into a key event of eukaryotic DNA replication.
42 s at individual replication forks undergoing DNA replication.
43 tly-occurring lesions that uniquely threaten DNA replication.
44 th DNA to produce DNA lesions that may block DNA replication.
45 pair (MMR) corrects errors that occur during DNA replication.
46 encoding capsid proteins as well as in viral DNA replication.
47 en-induced mouse liver tumours and show that DNA replication across persisting lesions can produce mu
48 chanistically, 6-4PPs, but not CPDs, impeded DNA replication across the genome as revealed by microfl
53 ure is driven by dynamic competition between DNA replication and chromosomal relaxation, providing a
57 tify a major epigenetic mechanism regulating DNA replication and directly linking replication origin
59 as it plays important roles in latent viral DNA replication and efficient segregation of the viral g
60 DNA replication or repair complexes, such as DNA replication and end resection machinery, and stimula
62 new role for LSD1 in the regulation of HSV-1 DNA replication and gene expression after the onset of D
64 otide pool is essential for high accuracy of DNA replication and is critical for retaining the genomi
65 n of the TNR within the FRAXA locus perturbs DNA replication and is the major causative factor for fr
66 are strongly associated with cell cycle and DNA replication and linked to a coordinated module of ex
68 ose a frequent and significant impediment to DNA replication and must be actively managed in order to
71 S stability may be compromised by incomplete DNA replication and repair in TAD boundaries core fragil
72 functions in both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA replication and repair processes, preferentially unw
74 by its interactions with distinct groups of DNA replication and repair proteins and by post-translat
75 a structure-specific nuclease with roles in DNA replication and repair, and has the greatest number
76 resence of R-loops contributes to defects in DNA replication and repair, gene expression, and genomic
78 propagation of life requires coordination of DNA replication and segregation with cell growth and div
79 atures of two chromosome metabolism modules, DNA replication and sister chromatid cohesion, and inact
81 new role for LSD1 in the regulation of viral DNA replication and successive steps in the virus life c
83 ivity on the strand-specific role of Pole in DNA replication and the action of extrinsic correction s
85 e BLM helicase protein plays a vital role in DNA replication and the maintenance of genomic integrity
87 e problematic for the essential processes of DNA replication and transcription because they deter nor
88 s) are a toxic form of DNA damage that block DNA replication and transcription by tethering the oppos
90 perform critical cellular functions such as DNA replication and transcription, DNA supercoiling, int
95 immunoblotting, proximity ligation, replicon DNA replication and whole virus immunofluorescence assay
96 e compounds 14 and 60 likely target the HAdV DNA replication, and 11, 17, 20, and 58 inhibit later st
101 nBu-PTEs at XT sites did not strongly impede DNA replication, and other nBu-PTEs displayed moderate b
103 -depletion of Mdm4 and Mdm2 further impaired DNA replication, and the overexpression of each partiall
104 C by 2-3 h; (v) Multiple processes including DNA replication, and the ubiquitin and proteasome pathwa
105 Pyrimidine synthetic genes peaked during DNA replication, and their depletion caused a filamentat
108 igase complex 4 (CRL4), known for modulating DNA replication, as a crucial mitotic regulator that tri
112 nto the lagging strand, which is crucial for DNA replication but dispensable for sister chromatid coh
113 Human and bacterial Lon proteases regulate DNA replication by degrading replication initiation fact
114 ription of the MCM6 gene that is involved in DNA replication by directly binding to specific motifs w
115 inhibited cell-cycle progression and reduced DNA replication by disrupting the formation of the minic
116 y of Mdm2 to modify chromatin and to support DNA replication by suppressing the formation of R-loops
117 , E2F-dependent transcription determines the DNA replication capacity of a cell, which affects the re
118 thods show that the kinetics and fidelity of DNA replication catalyzed by the labeled enzyme are larg
119 d included increases in proteins involved in DNA replication, cell cycle, RNA processing, and chromos
120 ts that animal cell Y RNAs are essential for DNA replication, cells lacking these RNAs divide normall
122 thologue of ATR and the sensor kinase of the DNA replication checkpoint in Schizosaccharomyces pombe
126 duplicate only once in coordination with the DNA replication cycle and have an important role in segr
130 eficient cells, and identified regulation of DNA replication dynamics as an important mechanistic con
131 readth is demonstrated by creating models of DNA replication dynamics, the gene expression dynamics i
132 of nuclear functions including initiation of DNA replication, epigenetic maintenance and associates w
133 y at a rate similar to those of other common DNA replication errors (i.e. ribonucleotide and mismatch
141 ggered by DNA damage in bacteria, depends on DNA replication for the generation of the SOS signal, ss
142 The replisome is a protein complex on the DNA replication fork and functions in a dynamic environm
143 k identifies CtIP as a critical regulator of DNA replication fork integrity, which, when compromised,
145 by SA1 and SA2 to 3D chromatin organization, DNA replication fork progression, and DNA double-strand
146 ic or induced by interferon-beta, accelerate DNA replication fork progression, resulting in extensive
150 in DNA repair and the protection of stalled DNA replication forks are thought to underlie the chemos
152 leterious nucleolytic degradation of stalled DNA replication forks in a manner similar to that of cel
155 PriA can recognize and remodel abandoned DNA replication forks, unwind DNA in the 3'-to-5' direct
159 -1-infected cells with SP-2509 blocked viral DNA replication, gene expression after the onset of DNA
161 odulation of viral mRNA processing and viral DNA replication.IMPORTANCE Human bocavirus 1 (HBoV1) is
162 ation and gene expression after the onset of DNA replication.IMPORTANCE Treatment of HSV-1-infected c
163 s the potential for on target examination of DNA replication in a wide range of biological contexts.
167 describe previously undetected subtelomeric DNA replication in G2/M and G1-phase-enriched cells.
168 ique single-molecule approach, we visualized DNA replication in isogenic PSCs generated by different
173 O80-dependent resolution of R-loops promotes DNA replication in the presence of transcription, thus e
174 kdown, suggesting that FACT functions during DNA replication in tumor cells but not in normal cells.
176 accumulated preferentially at 6-4PPs during DNA replication, indicating selective and prolonged repl
179 by different cell types and host ~80% of all DNA replication initiation events in any cell population
180 us, which corresponds with previously mapped DNA replication initiation regions and is demarcated by
182 nism essential for replisome assembly during DNA replication initiation that is vulnerable to inhibit
183 ed, kinase-independent function for AURKA in DNA replication initiation whose inhibition through a cl
185 e duplication programme employs subtelomeric DNA replication initiation, possibly extending beyond S
187 -subunit origin recognition complex (ORC), a DNA replication initiator, defines the localization of t
190 Protecting replication fork integrity during DNA replication is essential for maintaining genome stab
191 tion of the replicative H3 variant following DNA replication is essential for the transmission of the
202 DNA replication, unlike chromosome-internal DNA replication, is sensitive to hydroxyurea and depende
206 how alkyl-PTE lesions are recognized by the DNA replication machinery in prokaryotic cells and revea
207 fferentiation proficiency of PSCs, analyzing DNA replication may be a useful quality control tool.
208 and then, at night, undergo rapid cycles of DNA replication, mitosis, and cell division, producing u
209 ase is blocked by nocodazole, which inhibits DNA replication, mitosis, and cell division; this sugges
210 ity of these models is shown by adapting the DNA replication model to further include two topics of i
213 avage assay, we studied LexA cleavage during DNA replication of both undamaged and base-damaged templ
214 r B cell development, and others result from DNA replication or aberrant repair of breaks in sequence
216 echanisms induce its recruitment to specific DNA replication or repair complexes, such as DNA replica
217 n recruit and load enough MCM2-7 to initiate DNA replication, or human cell lines can sometimes recru
218 e function of multiple spatially distributed DNA replication origins for its stable inheritance.
221 n the structure and function of the archaeal DNA replication origins, the proteins that define them,
222 mmary, SMC5/6 is important for completion of DNA replication prior to entering mitosis, which ensures
223 compounds 6 and 43 possibly target the HAdV DNA replication process, while compounds 46 and 47 suppr
225 small-RNA-directed non-CG methylation during DNA replication promotes germline reprogramming and epig
227 ysis revealed that contractions occur during DNA replication, rather than by various DNA repair pathw
229 cyclin-dependent kinase 9 activity and viral DNA replication reduced Pol II on the viral genome and r
230 eJA-treatment of Arabidopsis in altering the DNA replication regulator CDC6, supporting conservation,
231 nscription factors (Myc, E2F1, TBX2, FOXM1), DNA replication regulators (CDKN1A, EZH2, RRM2), G1/S-tr
236 distinct signaling pathways and reveals the DNA replication/repair pathway as central in promoting t
237 ncovered novel connections to cell division, DNA replication/repair, signal transduction, and glutath
239 is established, maintained or changed during DNA replication represents a fundamental question in bio
240 ic for the expanded allele, independently of DNA replication, require transcription across the coding
246 d on these observations, initiation of plant DNA replication shows some similarity to, but is also di
249 e to sublethal ethanol concentrations causes DNA replication stress and an increased mutation rate.
251 is a cytidine deaminase driving mutagenesis, DNA replication stress and DNA damage in cancer cells.
252 disrupts cell-cycle progression and induces DNA replication stress and genome instability in small c
253 output in susceptible cell types can elicit DNA replication stress and may promote genomic instabili
254 V39H1 inhibition reactivated REs, leading to DNA replication stress and stimulation of MAVS/STING ant
255 on, and their inhibition selectively induces DNA replication stress and viral mimicry in cancer cells
256 demonstrated that absence of SMC5/6 leads to DNA replication stress at late-replicating regions such
258 ly evolved cells constitutively experiencing DNA replication stress caused by the absence of Ctf4, a
261 including elevated microtubule dynamics and DNA replication stress that can be partially rescued to
262 ne activation during tumorigenesis generates DNA replication stress, a known driver of genome rearran
263 Defective RRM1 S559 phosphorylation causes DNA replication stress, double-strand break, and genomic
264 stically, USP36 is deubiquitinated following DNA replication stress, which in turn facilitates its up
269 ngs highlight the evolution and diversity of DNA replication systems and provide insights into the re
270 volved in the regulation of gene expression, DNA replication, the cell cycle, and the DNA damage resp
274 -stranded DNA-binding protein RPA, efficient DNA replication through either a Reb1 or a nucleosome bl
275 and functional evidence for the emergence of DNA replication through the evolution of an ancestral RN
276 inks Cdk2 and Akt pathways to the control of DNA replication through the regulation of TopBP1-treslin
278 , we explore the transcriptional profile and DNA replication timing (RT) under mild replication stres
280 at the replication fork, beyond the needs of DNA replication, to promote establishment of sister chro
281 ions required for virus viability including, DNA replication, transcription regulation, genome packag
284 We also review the known pathways in which DNA replication, transcription, DNA repair, and chromati
285 t pathways controlled by (pp)pGpp, including DNA replication, transcription, nucleotide synthesis, ri
286 the single-molecule level to examine lambda DNA replication, transcription, virion assembly, and res
290 nt natural and nonnatural stimuli (errors in DNA replication, UV radiation, chemical agents, etc.) is
291 contexts of 5'-AT-3', 5'-CT-3', or 5'-GT-3', DNA replication was highly efficient and the replication
292 n PSCs with lower differentiation potential, DNA replication was incompletely reprogrammed, and genom
294 lved in aerobic respiration or mitochondrial DNA replication were either absent or present only as ps
296 mispaired eG contexts, which can form during DNA replication, were similarly poor substrates for AAG.
297 -quadruplexes represent unique roadblocks to DNA replication, which tends to stall at these secondary
298 s, bacteria maintain critical processes like DNA replication while removing misfolded proteins, which
300 ically for HIV prevention, inhibit EBV lytic DNA replication, with respective IC(50) values of 0.30 m