Mathematical Modelling of Chromosome Replication and Replicative Stress

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DNA replication is arguably the most crucial process at work in living cells. It is the mechanism by which organisms pass their genetic information from one generation to the next and life on Earth would be unthinkable without it. Despite the discovery of DNA structure in the 1950s, the mechanism of its replication remains rather elusive.

This work makes important contributions to this line of research. In particular, it addresses two key questions in the area of DNA replication: which evolutionary forces drive the positioning of replication origins in the chromosome and how is the spatial organization of replication factories achieved inside the nucleus of a cell?.

A cross-disciplinary approach uniting physics and biology is at the heart of this research. Along with experimental support, statistical physics theory produces optimal origin positions and provides a model for replication fork assembly in yeast. Advances made here can potentially further our understanding of disease mechanisms such as the abnormal replication in cancer.

Author(s): Jens Karschau (auth.)
Series: Springer Theses
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Year: 2015

Language: English
Pages: 76
Tags: Physics of the Cell; Statistical Physics, Dynamical Systems and Complexity; Nucleic Acid Chemistry; Genetic Engineering; Numerical and Computational Physics

Front Matter....Pages i-xiii
Introduction....Pages 1-18
Optimal Origin Placement for Minimal Replication Time....Pages 19-48
Actively Replicating Domains Randomly Associate into Replication Factories....Pages 49-74
Summary and Conclusions....Pages 75-76