Publication | Closed Access
Mitochondrial-Satellite and Circular DNA Filaments in Yeast
124
Citations
12
References
1967
Year
DnaSatellite DnaGeneticsDna AnalysisMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsYeastDna ComputingMitochondrial DnaBiophysicsCircular FilamentsDna ReplicationNuclear OrganizationStructural BiologyChromatinNatural SciencesCircular Dna FilamentsCellular StructureMedicine
Mitochondrial DNA of Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains a satellite DNA (density, 1.682) that appears to exist as open-ended filaments at least 5 microns long. DNA from intact cells contains circular filaments whose lengths vary from 0.5 to 7 microns, with a great majority at 1.95 microns. The circular DNA has a density similar to that of the major nuclear peak (1.697). When heat-denatured mitochondrial-satellite DNA is renatured, it cross-links to form a molecule that is larger than the native molecule. The formation of cross-links results in hypersharpening of the density profiles in cesium chloride and also leads to failure to pass Millipore filter paper.
| Year | Citations | |
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1963 | 589 | |
1959 | 442 | |
1962 | 437 | |
1964 | 253 | |
1963 | 226 | |
1964 | 217 | |
1963 | 196 | |
1966 | 159 | |
1966 | 121 | |
1966 | 106 |
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