Publication | Open Access
A dye-buoyant-density method for the detection and isolation of closed circular duplex DNA: the closed circular DNA in HeLa cells.
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Citations
23
References
1967
Year
DnaEngineeringGeneticsDna AnalysisMolecular BiologyBoar Sperm18Molecular GeneticsBacterial Plasmid DnaHela CellsVirus StructureDna NanotechnologyDye-buoyant-density MethodClosed Circular DnaDna SequencingClosed Circular DuplexesDna ReplicationVirologyCell BiologyBiomolecular EngineeringMicrobiologyMedicineMolecular Development
Covalently closed circular duplex DNA’s are now known to be widespread among living organisms. This DNA structure, originally identified in polyoma viral DNA,1’2 has been assigned to the mitochondrial DNA’s in ox3 and sheep heart,4 in mouse and chicken liver,3 and in unfertilized sea urchin egg.5 The animal viral DNA’s—polyoma, SV40,6 rabbit7 and human8 papilloma—the intracellular forms of the bacterial viral DNA’s—φX174,9, 10 lambda,11, 12 M13,13 and P2214—and a bacterial plasmid DNA, the colicinogenic factor E2,15 have all been shown to exist as closed circular duplexes. Other mitochondrial DNA’s16, 17 and a portion of the DNA from boar sperm18 have been reported to be circular, but as yet have not been shown to be covalently closed.
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