Publication | Open Access
Structural Organization of a Hypermethylated Nuclear DNA Component in Physarum polycephalum
10
Citations
22
References
1985
Year
DnaNuclear StructureComparative GenomicsGeneticsDna AnalysisMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsGenomicsRestriction Endonuclease HpaiiDna ComputingStructural OrganizationBiophysicsDna SequencingRestriction MappingDna ReplicationGenome StructureNuclear OrganizationGenetic VariationStructural BiologyBiologyChromatinNatural SciencesLow-molecular-weight Hpaii-digested FractionMedicinePhysarum Polycephalum
Digestion of Physarum polycephalum nuclear DNA using the restriction endonuclease HpaII generates two components, distinguishable on the basis of their molecular size. The high-molecular-weight, HpaII-resistant component, which accounts for 20% of the DNA, contains a fivefold greater concentration of 5-methylcytosine residues than the low-molecular-weight HpaII-digested fraction. Segments of hypermethylated (M+) DNA are largely composed of a single, long, highly repeated sequence, and this major element is sometimes associated with other less highly repetitive sequences in the M+ DNA fraction. Restriction mapping of cloned Physarum M+ DNA segments, and Southern blot analysis of genomic DNA using subcloned segments of M+ DNA as a probe, provide evidence for sequence variation within different copies of the dominant highly repeated element, and possibly the other associated repeats in M+ DNA, and additionally that almost complete tandemly repeated copies of the major repeat are found in some M+ DNA segments.
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