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EMBO Press, The EMBO Journal, 2(13), p. 462-470, 1994

DOI: 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1994.tb06281.x

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The inhibitor of DNA replication encoded by the Drosophila gene plutonium is a small, ankyrin repeat protein.

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

The plutonium (plu) gene product controls DNA replication early in Drosophila development. plu mutant females lay unfertilized eggs that have undergone extensive DNA synthesis. In fertilized embryos from plu mutant mothers, S-phase is uncoupled from mitosis. The gene is expressed only in ovaries and embryos, null alleles are strict maternal effect mutations, and the phenotype of inappropriate DNA replication is the consequence of loss-of-gene function. plu therefore negatively regulates S-phase at a time in early development when commitment to S-phase does not depend on cyclic transcription. plu encodes a protein with two ankyrin-like repeats, a domain for protein-protein interaction. plu is immediately adjacent to, but distinct from, the PCNA gene.