Wake C T, Gudewicz T, Porter T, White A, Wilson J H
Mol Cell Biol. 1984 Mar;4(3):387-98. doi: 10.1128/mcb.4.3.387-398.1984.
Relatively little is known about the damage suffered by transfected DNA molecules during their journey from outside the cell into the nucleus. To follow selectively the minor subpopulation that completes this journey, we devised a genetic approach using simian virus 40 DNA transfected with DEAE-dextran. We investigated this active subpopulation in three ways: (i) by assaying reciprocal pairs of mutant linear dimers which differed only in the arrangement of two mutant genomes; (ii) by assaying a series of wild-type oligomers which ranged from 1.1 to 2.0 simian virus 40 genomes in length; and (iii) by assaying linear monomers of simian virus 40 which were cleaved within a nonessential region to leave either sticky, blunt, or mismatched ends. We conclude from these studies that transfected DNA molecules in the active subpopulation are moderately damaged by fragmentation and modification of ends. As a whole, the active subpopulation suffers about one break per 5 to 15 kilobases, and about 15 to 20% of the molecules have one or both ends modified. Our analysis of fragmentation is consistent with the random introduction of double-strand breaks, whose cause and exact nature are unknown. Our analysis of end modification indicated that the most prevalent form of damage involved deletion or addition of less than 25 base pairs. In addition we demonstrated directly that the efficiencies of joining sticky, blunt, or mismatched ends are identical, verifying the apparent ability of cells to join nearly any two DNA ends and suggesting that the efficiency of joining approaches 100%. The design of these experiments ensured that the detected damage preceded viral replication and thus should be common to all DNAs transfected with DEAE-dextran and not specific for viral DNA. These measurements of damage within transfected DNA have important consequences for studies of homologous and nonhomologous recombination in somatic cells as is discussed.
对于转染的DNA分子在从细胞外部进入细胞核的过程中所遭受的损伤,人们了解相对较少。为了选择性地追踪完成这一过程的少数亚群,我们设计了一种遗传方法,使用经二乙氨基乙基葡聚糖(DEAE - 葡聚糖)转染的猴病毒40(SV40)DNA。我们通过三种方式研究了这个活性亚群:(i)检测仅在两个突变基因组排列上不同的相互配对的突变线性二聚体;(ii)检测一系列长度从1.1到2.0个SV40基因组的野生型寡聚体;(iii)检测在非必需区域内切割后留下粘性、平端或错配末端的SV40线性单体。我们从这些研究中得出结论,活性亚群中的转染DNA分子会因片段化和末端修饰而受到中度损伤。总体而言,活性亚群每5至15千碱基大约有一处断裂,约15%至20%的分子有一端或两端被修饰。我们对片段化的分析与双链断裂的随机引入一致,其原因和确切性质尚不清楚。我们对末端修饰的分析表明,最普遍的损伤形式是缺失或添加少于25个碱基对。此外,我们直接证明了连接粘性、平端或错配末端的效率是相同的,证实了细胞连接几乎任何两个DNA末端的明显能力,并表明连接效率接近100%。这些实验的设计确保了检测到的损伤发生在病毒复制之前,因此对于所有经DEAE - 葡聚糖转染的DNA来说应该是常见的,而不是病毒DNA特有的。如所讨论的,这些对转染DNA内损伤的测量对于体细胞中同源和非同源重组的研究具有重要意义。