Normal cells in culture are used to investigate the underlying mechanisms of DNA synthesis because they retain regulatory characteristics of the in vivo replication machinery. During the last few years new studies have identified a number of genetic changes that occur during in vitro ageing, providing insight into the progressive decline in biological function that occurs during ageing. Maintaining genomic integrity in eukaryotic organisms requires precisely coordinated replication of the genome during mitosis, which is the most fundamental aspect of living cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA hallmark of cellular ageing is the failure of senescing cells to initiate DNA synthesis and transition from G1 into S phase of the cell cycle. This transition is normally dependent on or concomitant with expression of a set of genes specifying cellular proteins, some of which directly participate in DNA replication. Deregulation of this gene expression may play a pivotal role in the ageing process.
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