Publication | Closed Access
An abnormal profile of DNA replication intermediates in Bloom's syndrome.
110
Citations
12
References
1990
Year
Bs CellsCytogeneticsGeneticsMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsDna Replication IntermediatesGenome InstabilityMeiosisDna ReplicationChromosomal RearrangementCell BiologyBiologyChromatinGenetic DisorderNatural SciencesChromosome BiologyNormal CellsMedicineMutagenesis
Bloom's syndrome (BS) cells display a characteristic genomic instability, notably an elevated frequency of sister-chromatid exchange. Replicating DNA in cultured BS cells was labeled with [3H]thymidine using several time schedules. Separation of DNA in agarose gels showed high molecular weight DNA and three classes of DNA replication intermediates: 20-kilobase DNA, 10-kilobase DNA, and Okazaki fragments. In contrast newly replicated DNA from normal cells showed no 20-kilobase DNA replication intermediates. Certain BS cells, exceptional in that their characteristic genomic instability has for unknown reasons been corrected, also differed from normal cells in having the 20-kilobase intermediate, but they differed from both normal cells and the other (the uncorrected) BS cells in lacking the 10-kilobase DNA replication intermediates.
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