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1.
J Cell Biol ; 63(1): 146-59, 1974 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4418353

RESUMO

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) replicative intermediates from Strongylocentrotus purpuratus oocytes were isolated by ethidium bromide-CsCl density gradient centrifugation and examined by electron microscopy after formamide spreading. In some experiments, the mtDNA was radioactively labeled by exposing isolated oocytes to [(3)H]thymidine. Oocyte mtDNA replication appears to follow the displacement loop model outlined in mouse L cells. There are differences in detail. The frequency of D-loop DNA is much lower in oocytes, suggesting that the relative holding time at the D-loop stage is shorter. Duplex synthesis on the displaced strand occurs early and with multiple initiations. The frequency of totally duplex replicative forms, or Cairns' forms, is the highest reported for mtDNA. The differences may be related to the fact that oocyte mtDNA replication occurs in the absence of cell division and need not be coordinated with a cell cycle. Molecules with expanded D loops banded in the intermediate region between the lower and upper bands in an ethidium bromide-CsCl gradient, supporting the notion that displacement replication proceeds on a closed circular template which is subject to nicking-closing cycles. In mature sea urchin eggs, replicative forms are absent and virtually all the mtDNA is stored as clean circular duplexes. Some novel structural variants of superhelical circular DNA (molecules with denaturation loops and double branch-migrated replicative forms) are reported.


Assuntos
Replicação do DNA , DNA Mitocondrial/biossíntese , Óvulo/metabolismo , Ouriços-do-Mar/metabolismo , Animais , Centrifugação com Gradiente de Concentração , DNA Circular/biossíntese , DNA Mitocondrial/isolamento & purificação , DNA de Cadeia Simples/biossíntese , Feminino , Modelos Químicos , Desnaturação de Ácido Nucleico , Timidina/metabolismo , Trítio
2.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 432(3): 257-66, 1976 May 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1268254

RESUMO

1. The frequency of circular dimers and catenanes was determined in thyroid mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from rabbits, mice, pigs, sheep and cattle. 2. The mtDNA from freshly removed thyroids was isolated by buoyant density centrifugation in ethidium bromide/CsCl gradients after DNAase treatment of the mitochondrial pellet. Typically, more than 90% of the recovered mtDNA was found in the lower band, indicating a low rate of nicking during isolation. A sample of the total mtDNA (upper and lower bands) was examined by electron microscopy after preparation by the aqueous protein film technique. 3. The frequency of circular dimers generally ranged from 0.1 to 0.3%. However, in an mtDNA sample from cow thyroid, the frequency of circular dimers was 0.6% (0.9% if circular dimers occuring in catenanes are included(, differing significantly from the frequency of these forms in bull thyroid, 0.1%. A small but significant variability also occurred in the frequency of catenanes ranging from 2 to 8% in the different groups; this variation is within the limits usually observed in normal tissues. 4. These observations indicate that thyroids, like other normal tissues examined so far, have a low content of circular dimers. A high frequency of these forms seems to be the trademark of some genetically and physiologically abnormal cells such as certain established cell lines, virus-transformed cells and malignant or otherwise pathological tissues.


Assuntos
DNA Mitocondrial/metabolismo , Glândula Tireoide/metabolismo , Animais , Sítios de Ligação , Bovinos , Centrifugação com Gradiente de Concentração , DNA Circular/metabolismo , Feminino , Substâncias Macromoleculares , Camundongos , Microscopia Eletrônica , Mitocôndrias/metabolismo , Mitocôndrias/ultraestrutura , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico , Coelhos , Ovinos , Especificidade da Espécie , Suínos
3.
J Gen Physiol ; 49(6): 103-25, 1966 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4290891

RESUMO

Several types of circular DNA molecules are now known. These are classified as single-stranded rings, covalently closed duplex rings, and weakly bonded duplex rings containing an interruption in one or both strands. Single rings are exemplified by the viral DNA from phiX174 bacteriophage. Duplex rings appear to exist in a twisted configuration in neutral salt solutions at room temperature. Examples of such molecules are the DNA's from the papova group of tumor viruses and certain intracellular forms of phiX and lambda-DNA. These DNA's have several common properties which derive from the topological requirement that the winding number in such molecules is invariant. They sediment abnormally rapidly in alkaline (denaturing) solvents because of the topological barrier to unwinding. For the same basic reason these DNA's are thermodynamically more stable than the strand separable DNA's in thermal and alkaline melting experiments. The introduction of one single strand scission has a profound effect on the properties of closed circular duplex DNA's. In neutral solutions a scission appears to generate a swivel in the complementary strand at a site in the helix opposite to the scission. The twists are then released and a slower sedimenting, weakly closed circular duplex is formed. Such circular duplexes exhibit normal melting behavior, and in alkali dissociate to form circular and linear single strands which sediment at different velocities. Weakly closed circular duplexes containing an interruption in each strand are formed by intramolecular cyclization of viral lambda-DNA. A third kind of weakly closed circular duplex is formed by reannealing single strands derived from circularly permuted T2 DNA. These reconstituted duplexes again contain an interruption in each strand though not necessarily regularly spaced with respect to each other.


Assuntos
DNA Viral , Bacteriófagos , Centrifugação com Gradiente de Concentração , Fenômenos Químicos , Química , Desoxirribonucleases , Calefação , Microscopia Eletrônica , Polyomavirus , Vírus 40 dos Símios
20.
Cell ; 8(2): 215-26, 1976 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-183892

RESUMO

By a method of overlapping the results obtained after agarose gel electrophoresis under two different sets of conditions, it has become possible to determine the number of superhelical turns in a given DNA by counting the bands present after partially relaxing the DNA (Keller and Wendel, 1974) with highly purified nicking-closing (N-C) enzyme from LA9 mouse cell nuclei. Because native supercoiled DNA is heterogeneous with respect to superhelix density, an average number of superhelical turns was determined. Virion SV40 DNA contains 26 +/- 0.5 superhelical turns, and native Minicol DNA contains 19 +/- 0.5 superhelical turns. The above are values at 0.2 M NaCl and at 37 degrees C, the condition under which the enzymatic relaxations were performed. The superhelix densities determined by the band counting method have been compared with superhelix densities determined by buoyant equilibrium in PDl-CsCl gradients. The Gray, Upholt, and Vinograd (1971) calculation procedure has been used for evaluating the superhelix densities by the latter method with the new statement, however, that relaxed DNA has zero superhelical turns. Comparison of the superhelix densities obtained by both methods permits a calculation of an unwinding angle for ethidium. The mean value from experiments with SV40 DNA is 23 +/- 3 degree. The average number of superhelical turns in SV40, 26, combined with the value, 21, obtained by both Griffith (1975) and Germond et al. (1975) for the average number of nucleosomes per SV40 genome, yields an average of 1.25 superhelical turns per 1/21 of the SV40 genome. If the regions of internucleosomal DNA are fully relaxed, 1.25 correesponds to the average number of superhelical turns with a nucleosome. When analyzed under identical conditions, the limit product generated by ligating a nicked circular substrate in the presence of 0.001 M Mg2+ at 37 degrees C (ligation conditions) is slightly more positively supercoiled than the limit product obtained when the N-C reaction is performed in 0.2 M NaCl at 37 degrees C. The difference in superhelix density as measured in gels between the two sets of limit products for both Minicol and SV40 DNAs is 0.0059 +/- 0.0005. This result indicates that the DNA duplex is overwound in the ligation solvent relative to its state in 0.2 M NaCl.


Assuntos
DNA Bacteriano , DNA Viral , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico , Vírus 40 dos Símios , Densitometria , Eletroforese em Gel de Ágar , Etídio , Magnésio/farmacologia , Métodos , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico/efeitos dos fármacos , Cloreto de Sódio
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