The stable propagation of genetic information requires that the entire genome of an organism be faithfully replicated only once in each cell cycle. In eukaryotes, this replication is initiated at hundreds to thousands of replication origins distributed over the genome, each of which must be prohibited from re-initiating DNA replication within a cell cycle. Initiation of DNA replication occurs by a two step process. In the first step, initiation proteins are assembled onto the replication origin in a step-wise fashion to yield an initiation complex. In the second step, the initiation complex is activated by protein kinases, resulting in the establishment of replication forks...