One-way traffic: How are different stages of the cell cycle coordinated?

We all originate from a single cell, the fertilized egg, through cell division. Before a cell can divide it has to increase in size, duplicate its DNA and precisely separate the chromosomes into two daughter cells. These processes are coordinated in the cell cycle. Since the process of cell division has been observed, the next big question is how the cell cycle is regulated. In a Nature paper published in 1970, Rao and Johnson discovered an important clue to the nature of cell-cycle regulation by fusing mammalian cells in different phases of the cell cycle. This elegant experiment firstly showed the existence of diffusible dominant factors affecting cell cycle progression. Besides, it provides an insight into the concept of checkpoint controls. Due to this significant observation, the identification of the cell cycle regulators has been a focus ever since. 










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