Replication Limits
Cross-source consensus on Replication Limits from 1 sources and 7 claims.
1 sources · 7 claims
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Highlighted claims
- The replication-limit model assigns every wild-type cell a nonnegative replication capacity. — Cellular replication limits in the Luria-Delbrück mutation model
- A wild-type cell with positive replication capacity divides into two daughters with one less unit of capacity. — Cellular replication limits in the Luria-Delbrück mutation model
- A wild-type cell with zero replication capacity becomes senescent and stops dividing. — Cellular replication limits in the Luria-Delbrück mutation model
- Replication limits cap the supply of dividing wild-type cells over time. — Cellular replication limits in the Luria-Delbrück mutation model
- With finite replication capacity, the dividing wild-type population eventually disappears even if initial net growth is positive. — Cellular replication limits in the Luria-Delbrück mutation model
- Most human somatic cells undergo replicative senescence after a finite number of divisions. — Cellular replication limits in the Luria-Delbrück mutation model
- Replicative senescence is treated as cancer-suppressive because it limits clonal expansion and mutation opportunities. — Cellular replication limits in the Luria-Delbrück mutation model