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      Unraveling cell type-specific and reprogrammable human replication origin signatures associated with G-quadruplex consensus motifs.

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          Abstract

          DNA replication is highly regulated, ensuring faithful inheritance of genetic information through each cell cycle. In metazoans, this process is initiated at many thousands of DNA replication origins whose cell type-specific distribution and usage are poorly understood. We exhaustively mapped the genome-wide location of replication origins in human cells using deep sequencing of short nascent strands and identified ten times more origin positions than we expected; most of these positions were conserved in four different human cell lines. Furthermore, we identified a consensus G-quadruplex-forming DNA motif that can predict the position of DNA replication origins in human cells, accounting for their distribution, usage efficiency and timing. Finally, we discovered a cell type-specific reprogrammable signature of cell identity that was revealed by specific efficiencies of conserved origin positions and not by the selection of cell type-specific subsets of origins.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nat Struct Mol Biol
          Nature structural & molecular biology
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          1545-9985
          1545-9985
          Aug 2012
          : 19
          : 8
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Laboratory of Plasticity of the Genome and Aging, Functional Genomics Institute, Montpellier, France.
          Article
          nsmb.2339
          10.1038/nsmb.2339
          22751019
          7eef9c34-7d5c-4fe2-a644-82f31808f14b
          History

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