Regulation of DNA replication is critical, and loss of control can lead to DNA amplification. Naturally occurring, developmentally regulated DNA amplification occurs in the DNA puffs of the late larval salivary gland giant polytene chromosomes in the fungus fly, Sciara coprophila. The steroid hormone ecdysone induces DNA amplification in Sciara, and the amplification origin of DNA puff II/9A contains a putative binding site for the ecdysone receptor (EcR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree questions central to understanding the initiation of DNA replication in eukaryotes are: (1) Does DNA synthesis begin at a defined place? (2) What determines replication initiation sites? (3) What regulates an origin to fire only once per cell cycle? A key player in this is the origin recognition complex (ORC), required for assembly of the pre-replication complex (pre-RC), that is converted later to the initiation complex (IC). In both yeast ARS1 and DNA puff II/9A of the metazoan fly Sciara, there is a defined start site of replication adjacent to an ORC-binding site. Although ORC has some inherent preference for certain DNA sequences, other factors may also modulate its binding to DNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Nopp140 gene of Drosophila maps within 79A5 of chromosome 3. Alternative splicing yields two variants. DmNopp140 (654 residues) is the sequence homolog of vertebrate Nopp140.
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