SummaryDNA damage checkpoint prevents segregation of damaged chromosomes by imposing cell-cycle arrest. In budding yeast, Mec1, Chk1, and Rad53 (homologous to human ATM/ATR, Chk1, and Chk2 kinases, respectively) are among the main effectors of this pathway. The DNA damage checkpoint is thought to inhibit chromosome segregation by preventing separase-mediated cleavage of cohesins. Here, we describe a regulatory network that prevents segregation of damaged chromosomes by restricting spindle elongation and acts in parallel with inhibition of cohesin cleavage. This control circuit involves Rad53, polo kinase, the anaphase-promoting complex activator Cdh1, and the bimC kinesin family proteins Cin8 and Kip1. The inhibition of polo kinase by Rad53...
SummaryThe mitotic checkpoint, also known as the spindle assembly checkpoint, delays anaphase onset ...
Spontaneous DNA damage poses a continuous threat to genomic integrity. If unchecked, genotoxic insul...
DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) can cause chromosomal rearrangements and extensive loss of heterozyg...
SummaryDNA damage checkpoint prevents segregation of damaged chromosomes by imposing cell-cycle arre...
Cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) governs cell cycle progression, and its kinase activity fluctuates dur...
A single HO endonuclease-induced double-strand break (DSB) is sufficient to activate the DNA damage ...
AbstractA mitotic checkpoint arrests cell cycle progression in response to spindle damage. It now ap...
Two cell cycle surveillance systems––the DNA damage checkpoint and the spindle checkpoint––guard aga...
During DNA replication, replication forks are prone to stall and collapse. To prevent genomic instab...
SummaryTwo mechanisms safeguard the bipolar attachment of chromosomes in mitosis. A correction mecha...
The presence of DNA damage activates a conserved cellular response known as the DNA damage checkpoin...
The DNA integrity checkpoints ensure completion of DNA replication and DNA repair before entry into ...
Checkpoints are surveillance mechanisms that constitute a barrier to oncogenesis by preserving genom...
AbstractBackground: The G2–M-phase transition is controlled by cell-cycle checkpoint pathways which ...
Ubiquitin-mediated proteolytic degradation is fundamental to eukaryotic cell cycle progression. From...
SummaryThe mitotic checkpoint, also known as the spindle assembly checkpoint, delays anaphase onset ...
Spontaneous DNA damage poses a continuous threat to genomic integrity. If unchecked, genotoxic insul...
DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) can cause chromosomal rearrangements and extensive loss of heterozyg...
SummaryDNA damage checkpoint prevents segregation of damaged chromosomes by imposing cell-cycle arre...
Cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) governs cell cycle progression, and its kinase activity fluctuates dur...
A single HO endonuclease-induced double-strand break (DSB) is sufficient to activate the DNA damage ...
AbstractA mitotic checkpoint arrests cell cycle progression in response to spindle damage. It now ap...
Two cell cycle surveillance systems––the DNA damage checkpoint and the spindle checkpoint––guard aga...
During DNA replication, replication forks are prone to stall and collapse. To prevent genomic instab...
SummaryTwo mechanisms safeguard the bipolar attachment of chromosomes in mitosis. A correction mecha...
The presence of DNA damage activates a conserved cellular response known as the DNA damage checkpoin...
The DNA integrity checkpoints ensure completion of DNA replication and DNA repair before entry into ...
Checkpoints are surveillance mechanisms that constitute a barrier to oncogenesis by preserving genom...
AbstractBackground: The G2–M-phase transition is controlled by cell-cycle checkpoint pathways which ...
Ubiquitin-mediated proteolytic degradation is fundamental to eukaryotic cell cycle progression. From...
SummaryThe mitotic checkpoint, also known as the spindle assembly checkpoint, delays anaphase onset ...
Spontaneous DNA damage poses a continuous threat to genomic integrity. If unchecked, genotoxic insul...
DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) can cause chromosomal rearrangements and extensive loss of heterozyg...