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Endocycles: a recurrent evolutionary innovation for post-mitotic cell growth

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 3, Pages 197-210

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nrm3756

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Funding

  1. European Research Council [268515]
  2. German Cancer Research Center (Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, DKFZ)
  3. DKFZ
  4. MINECO [BFU2009-9783, BFU2012-34821]
  5. Fundacion Ramon Areces

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In endoreplication cell cycles, known as endocycles, cells successively replicate their genomes without segregating chromosomes during mitosis and thereby become polyploid. Such cycles, for which there are many variants, are widespread in protozoa, plants and animals. Endocycling cells can achieve ploidies of >200,000 C (chromatin-value); this increase in genomic DNA content allows a higher genomic output, which can facilitate the construction of very large cells or enhance macromolecular secretion. These cells execute normal S phases, using a G1-S regulatory apparatus similar to the one used by mitotic cells, but their capability to segregate chromosomes has been suppressed, typically by downregulation of mitotic cyclin-dependent kinase activity. Endocycles probably evolved many times, and the various endocycle mechanisms found in nature highlight the versatility of the cell cycle control machinery.

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