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1.
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Recent studies indicate that mammalian chromosomes contain discrete cis-acting loci that control replication timing, mitotic condensation, and stability of entire chromosomes. Disruption of the large non-coding RNA gene ASAR6 results in late replication, an under-condensed appearance during mitosis, and structural instability of human chromosome 6. Similarly, disruption of the mouse Xist gene in adult somatic cells results in a late replication and instability phenotype on the X chromosome. ASAR6 shares many characteristics with Xist, including random mono-allelic expression and asynchronous replication timing. Additional "chromosome engineering" studies indicate that certain chromosome rearrangements affecting many different chromosomes display this abnormal replication and instability phenotype. These observations suggest that all mammalian chromosomes contain "inactivation/stability centers" that control proper replication, condensation, and stability of individual chromosomes. Therefore, mammalian chromosomes contain four types of cis-acting elements, origins, telomeres, centromeres, and "inactivation/stability centers", all functioning to ensure proper replication, condensation, segregation, and stability of individual chromosomes.  相似文献   

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The halophilic archaeon Haloferax volcanii has a multireplicon genome, consisting of a main chromosome, three secondary chromosomes, and a plasmid. Genes for the initiator protein Cdc6/Orc1, which are commonly located adjacent to archaeal origins of DNA replication, are found on all replicons except plasmid pHV2. However, prediction of DNA replication origins in H. volcanii is complicated by the fact that this species has no less than 14 cdc6/orc1 genes. We have used a combination of genetic, biochemical, and bioinformatic approaches to map DNA replication origins in H. volcanii. Five autonomously replicating sequences were found adjacent to cdc6/orc1 genes and replication initiation point mapping was used to confirm that these sequences function as bidirectional DNA replication origins in vivo. Pulsed field gel analyses revealed that cdc6/orc1-associated replication origins are distributed not only on the main chromosome (2.9 Mb) but also on pHV1 (86 kb), pHV3 (442 kb), and pHV4 (690 kb) replicons. Gene inactivation studies indicate that linkage of the initiator gene to the origin is not required for replication initiation, and genetic tests with autonomously replicating plasmids suggest that the origin located on pHV1 and pHV4 may be dominant to the principal chromosomal origin. The replication origins we have identified appear to show a functional hierarchy or differential usage, which might reflect the different replication requirements of their respective chromosomes. We propose that duplication of H. volcanii replication origins was a prerequisite for the multireplicon structure of this genome, and that this might provide a means for chromosome-specific replication control under certain growth conditions. Our observations also suggest that H. volcanii is an ideal organism for studying how replication of four replicons is regulated in the context of the archaeal cell cycle.  相似文献   

5.
This paper provides a theoretical analysis of pecularities of both the frequency and intrachromosomal distribution of chromatid aberrations observed in the first post-treatment mitosis and induced by clastogenic agents showing delayed effects (S-phase dependent clastogens), as functions of recovery time. The theoretical deductions are based on the following facts: (1) DNA is the target of clastogen action. Lesions induced by clastogens showing delayed effects (e.g. mono- and polyfunctional alkylating agents, ultraviolet light) give rise to aberrations only after interference with the process(es) associated with DNA replication. (2) DNA replication occurs asynchronously with respect to the local involvement in replication of different chromatin regions and according to a highly ordered pattern. (3) Lesions may be removed from DNA (or otherwise modified) by repair processes prior to replication. The removal of lesions from DNA is a time-dependent function.Several possibilities are analysed (i.e. random or non-random distribution of DNA lesions, uniform or locally differing capacities of pre-replicative repair of lesions, uniform or locally differing rates of DNA synthesis) and the frequencies and distribution patterns of chromosome structural changes, as expressed in form of aberration yield-time curves, have been discussed. The theory presented in this paper offers a simple interpretation both of variations of aberration frequency and aberration distribution in dependence on the cell's position within the cell cycle during induction of lesions.It is shown that the intrachromosomal aberration distribution is non-random even if random distribution of lesions and uniform repair rates between chromosome regions replicating at different time periods during S are assumed. Non-random aberration distributions are a necessary consequence of at least two factors: (a) the temporal replication pattern, and (b) the repair activities acting prior to replication. Random distribution of aberrations is only to be expected for the most simplified situation (random distribution of lesions along the DNA and equal transformation probabilities of a given kind of lesion into aberrations) when no loss of lesions prior to replication takes place (no pre-replicative repair) and cells treated with the mutagen during G1 are analysed.  相似文献   

6.
The normal morphology of the polytene chromosomes of the embryo suspensor of Phaseolus coccineus is that of a tightly condensed cord with heavily Feulgen staining centromeric heterochromatic regions (α-heterochromatin) and other accessory heterochromatic regions (β-heterochromatin). The replication pattern of the chromosomes has been determined by autoradiographic analysis of material pulsed with 3H-thymidine for various lengths of time. The DNA replication cycle reqires 4–6 hours for completion. During replication chromosome structure becomes diffuse and the β-heterochromatic regions are indistinguishable from the euchromatic regions. The euchromatin is the first to replicate, and replication begins simultaneously at numerous sites in the euchromatin. The β-heterochromatin replicates next, and finally the centromeric heterochromatin. Replication is essentially complete in each of these parts of the chromosome before DNA synthesis begins in the next. The chromosomes are composed of numerous longitudinally running Feulgen positive strands, the equivalent portions of which replicate simultaneously. This indicates that there must be close control of the replication cycle in sister strands.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The chromosome replication pattern of a man with 49,XXXXY was analyzed using 3H-thymidine and autoradiography as well as BrdU and acridine orange. The former technique showed a highly irregular replication pattern; the latter revealed one early replicating X chromosome, and the other three more or less asynchronously replicating. Two hypotheses seem to explain best the abnormal phenotype of males with an XXXXY sex chromosome constitution: (1) The number of the always active regions (tip of Xp) and of the possibly always active regions (the Q-dark regions on both sides of the centromere) is increased from one to four. (2) The replication pattern of the late-replicating X chromosomes is highly asynchronous, which might affect the phenotype. The possibility that more than one X chromosome might remain active in some cells, an even more abnormal and obviously deleterious situation, is still open.  相似文献   

8.
R S Lemons  S J O'Brien  C J Sherr 《Cell》1977,12(1):251-262
Somatic cell hybrids derived from seven independent fusions between mouse X human and hamster X human parental cells were examined for their ability to support the replication of the baboon endogenous type C virus. These hybrids preferentially segregated human chromosomes while retaining rodent chromosomes, as demonstrated by karyotypic and isozyme analysis. A total of 41 primary colonies and 33 secondary subclones were analyzed for viral replication, as well as for the presence of enzyme structural gene markers for 19 of 23 human chromosomes. A syntenic association was seen between the ability of the baboon type C virus to infect and replicate in hybrid cultures and the expression of human malic enzyme-1 (assigned to human chromosome 6). Analysis of 86 highly segregated subclones derived from cells preinfected with baboon type C virus showed that the continued production of baboon type C virus segregated concordantly with the expression of three enzyme genes assigned to human chromosome 6 (malic enzyme-1, phosphoglucomutase-3 and superoxide dismutase-2). Subclones of infected hybrids which lost chromosome 6 and failed to release virus also failed to synthesize the virus-coded major structural protein p30. No syntenic association between baboon virus expression and any of 18 other human chromosomes was observed. These studies define a new gene (designated Bevi) on human chromosome 6 which dominantly controls the replication of baboon type C virus. The data suggest that Bevi may be a preferred integration site for the baboon type C DNA provirus in the human genome.  相似文献   

9.
DNA replication patterns were determined in the autosomes and sex chromosomes of phytohemagglutinin-stimulated lymphocytes from the opossum (Didelphis virginiana) by employing thymidine-3H labeling and high-resolution radioautography. Opossum chromosomes are desirable experimental material due to their large size, low number (2n = 22), and morphologically distinct sex chromosomes. The autosomes in both sexes began DNA synthesis synchronously and terminated replication asynchronously. One female X chromosome synthesized DNA throughout most of the S phase. Its homologue, however, began replication approximately 3.5 hr later. The two X's terminated DNA synthesis synchronously, slightly later than the autosomes. This form of late replication, in which one X chromosome begins DNA synthesis later than its homologue but completes replication at the same time as its homologue, is apparently unique in the opossum. The male X synthesized DNA throughout S while the Y chromosome exhibited late-replicating characteristics. The two sex chromosomes completed synthesis synchronously, slightly later than the autosomes. Grain counts were performed on all chromosomes to analyze trends in labeling intensity at hourly intervals of S. By analyzing the percent of labeled mitotic figures on radioautographs at various intervals after introduction of arginine-3H, chromosomal protein synthesis was found not to be restricted to any portion of interphase but to increase throughout S and into G2.  相似文献   

10.
The complete DNA replication sequence of the entire complement of chromosomes in the Chinese hamster may be studied by using the method of continuous H3-thymidine labeling and the method of 5-fluorodeoxyuridine block with H3-thymidine pulse labeling as relief. Many chromosomes start DNA synthesis simultaneously at multiple sites, but the sex chromosomes (the Y and the long arm of the X) begin DNA replication approximately 4.5 hours later and are the last members of the complement to finish replication. Generally, chromosomes or segments of chromosomes that begin replication early complete it early, and those which begin late, complete it late. Many chromosomes bear characteristically late replicating regions. During the last hour of the S phase, the entire Y, the long arm of the X, and chromosomes 10 and 11 are heavily labeled. The short arm of chromosome 1, long arm of chromosome 2, distal portion of chromosome 6, and short arms of chromosomes 7, 8, and 9 are moderately labeled. The long arm of chromosome 1 and the short arm of chromosome 2 also have late replicating zones or bands. The centromeres of chromosomes 4 and 5, and occasionally a band on the short arm of the X are lightly labeled.  相似文献   

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12.
The DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) that initiate meiotic recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae are preceded first by DNA replication and then by a chromatin transition at DSB sites. This chromatin transition, detected as a quantitative increase in micrococcal nuclease (MNase) sensitivity, occurs specifically at DSB sites and not at other MNase-sensitive sites. Replication and DSB formation are directly linked: breaks do not form if replication is blocked, and delaying replication of a region also delays DSB formation in that region. We report here experiments that examine the relationship between replication, the DSB-specific chromatin transition and DSB formation. Deleting replication origins (and thus delaying replication) on the left arm of one of the two parental chromosomes III affects DSBs specifically on that replication-delayed arm and not those on the normally replicating arm. Thus, replication timing determines DSB timing in cis. Delaying replication on the left arm of chromosome III also delays the chromatin transition at DSB sites on that arm but not on the normally replicating right arm. Since the chromatin transition precedes DSB formation and requires the function of many genes necessary for DSB formation, these results suggest that initial events for DSB formation in chromatin are coupled with premeiotic DNA replication.  相似文献   

13.
By means of a cytological method involving BrdU incorporation and acridine orange fluorescence staining in combination with embryo manipulation, we studied X-chromosome activity in female preimplantation mouse embryos with special reference to the correlation between X-chromosome inactivation and cell differentiation. There was no sign of asynchronous replication between the two X chromosomes from the one-cell to intermediate blastocyst stage. The allocyclic X chromosome, first detected in late blastocysts, was paternal in origin, mostly replicating early in the S phase and limited to the trophectoderm. Subsequent X-chromosome inactivation occurring in the primary endoderm was also characterized by the involvement of the paternal X and early replication. Both X chromosomes continued to replicate synchronously in the embryonic ectoderm or epiblast at this stage. It was evident that overt cell differentiation preceded the appearance of the asynchronously replicating X chromosome in the trophectoderm and primary endoderm. This finding seems to support the view that cell differentiation is an important correlate of X-chromosome inactivation.  相似文献   

14.
We have examined autoradiographically the pattern of DNA replication following the germination of Bacillus subtilis spores in [3H]thymidine. Thymine-requiring spores were germinated in low specific activity medium and diluted into higher specific activity medium soon after the first round of replication was expected to start. After a further short period, replication was stopped and the chromosomal structures examined by autoradiography. From the pattern of labelling within individual replicating loops it is clear that the majority (≥75%) expand by growth at two positions that are opposite, i.e. expand bidirectionally. The loops continue to expand at approximately equal rates in both directions until at least 20% of the chromosome has been replicated.From a consideration of the other structural forms that become visible, it seems likely that most chromosomes replicate bidirectionally.  相似文献   

15.
Akio Kusanagi 《Chromosoma》1966,20(1):125-132
The rate of DNA replication, as judged by H3-thymidine incorporation, at the specific time of the S-period in chromosomes of barley (Hakata No. 2) is studied by means of autoradiography.In the barley chromosomes, two different DNA units with respect to replication-time are distinguishable. The early replicating DNA is replicated at least within 1 hour ab init. of the S-period, and the late replicating DNA within 1/2 to 1 hour before the end of the S-period. The replication scarcely occurs in the middle of the S-period. These evidences suggest that the replication of chromosomal DNA in the present material does, therefore, not proceed in a continuous time sequence. Topographically, the early replicating DNA is almost confined exclusively to the distal regions of the chromosomes 1 and 5, and this situation seems applicable to other chromosomes as well, whereas the late replicating DNA is close to the centromere on its both sides. Hence, the replication of chromosomal DNA does not proceed uniformly in a longitudinal sequence along the chromosomes. The interrelationships among chromosome structure in its cytological expression, replication -pattern and -time of chromosomes, and regulating mechanisms of DNA replication are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Leukocyte and skin cultures of a female hybrid between a donkey and Grevy zebra show a diploid chromosome complement of 48. From this finding it is inferred that the Grevy zebra is characterized by 2n=34 and that such hybrid's regular infertility is analogous to that of mules and hinnies.Barr bodies were present in the tissue-cultured cells and studies with tritiated thymidine show that Barr body and the chromosome set replicate asynchronously. One large element corresponds to the late replicating X of other species and often possesses the morphologic features of a donkey X. At other times it is decidedly more metacentric, a quality tentatively assigned to the Grevy zebra X. Not enough cells could be studied to determine whether random or selective late replication (? inactivation) of one or the other of the sex chromosomes takes place. It is suggested that the study of such hybrids may yield cytologic information concerning the lyon hypothesis.Supported by a Grant from the USPH Service, GM 10210.The authors acknowledge gratefully the assistance of Mrs. Jane Juergens in photographic work.  相似文献   

17.
W. Schempp  M. Schmid 《Chromosoma》1981,83(5):697-710
A modified BrdU-Hoechst-Giemsa technique permitted the demonstration of easily reproducible replication patterns in the somatic chromosomes of Amphibia. These banding patterns allow for the first time a precise identification of all chromosomes and the analysis of the patterns of replication in the various stages of S-phase in Amphibia. Several possibilities for the use of this technique were demonstrated on three frog species of the family Ranidae, all differing greatly in their DNA-content. With this method, the homomorphic chromosome pair No. 4 in Rana esculenta could be identified as sex-specific chromosomes of the XX/XY-type. All male animals exhibit an extremely late replicating region in the Y-chromosome, which is lacking in the X-chromosome; in the female animals, both X-chromosomes replicate synchronously. These sex-specific chromosomes cannot be distinguished by other banding techniques. In the highly heteromorphic ZZ/ZW-sex chromosome system of Pyxicephalus adspersus a synchronous replication of the two Z-chromosomes of male animals and a very late replication of the short arm of the W-chromosome of female animals was demonstrated. These results support the assumption that there is no dosage compensation for Z-linked or X-linked genes by the sex chromosome inactivation mechanism in the sex chromosomes of Amphibia.  相似文献   

18.
On the basis of limited information, bacteria were once assumed to have no more than one chromosome. In the era of genomics, it has become clear that some, like eukaryotes, have more than one chromosome. Multichromosome bacteria provide opportunities to investigate how split genomes emerged, whether the individual chromosomes communicate to coordinate their replication and segregation, and what selective advantages split genomes might provide. Our current knowledge of these topics comes mostly from studies in Vibrio cholerae, which has two chromosomes, chr1 and chr2. Chr1 carries out most of the house-keeping functions and is considered the main chromosome, whereas chr2 appears to have originated from a plasmid and has acquired genes of mostly unknown origin and function. Nevertheless, unlike plasmids, chr2 replicates once and only once per cell cycle, like a bona fide chromosome. The two chromosomes replicate and segregate using separate programs, unlike eukaryotic chromosomes. They terminate replication synchronously, suggesting that there might be communication between them. Replication of the chromosomes is affected by segregation genes but in a chromosome specific fashion, a new development in the field of DNA replication control. The split genome allows genome duplication to complete in less time and with fewer replication forks, which could be beneficial for genome maintenance during rapid growth, which is the norm for V. cholerae in broth cultures and in the human host. In the latter, the expression of chr2 genes increases preferentially. Studies of chromosome maintenance in multichromosomal bacteria, although in their infancy, are already broadening our view of chromosome biology. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Chromatin in time and space.  相似文献   

19.
Klaus Hägele 《Chromosoma》1970,31(1):91-138
The pattern of DNA-synthesis of the salivary gland chromosomes of Chironomus thummi thummi, Ch. th. piger, Ch. annularius, Ch. plumosus and Ch. melanotus was studied using H3-thymidine-autoradiography. Contrary to the previous conception the bands of the salivary gland chromosomes of Chironomus do not begin replication simultaneously. H3-thymidine incorporation in bands of high DNA content begins later than in bands with a lesser amount of DNA. This difference in time is very small in bands outside the kinetochore regions and not comparable to the asynchrony in replication of typical heterochromatin in the salivary gland chromosomes of Chironomus melanotus. Differences in the amount of DNA in homologous bands do not affect the onset of replication. — Bands of high DNA content are replicating during a longer time than those having less DNA. However, certain chromosome regions behave differently. In these regions bands of very low DNA content are synthesizing DNA during the whole replication cycle. Since no excessive increase of DNA could be observed in these regions it is supposed that in addition to the duplication of structural DNA an extra DNA is synthesized which disappears immediately from the chromosome. — At the end of the replication cycle in the salivary gland nuclei of the hybrid Chironomus th. thummi X Ch. th. piger a labeling pattern is found in the chromosomes of Ch. th. thummi which differs from that in the parental subspecies Ch. th. thummi.  相似文献   

20.
We have recently established a cell-free system from human cells that initiates semi-conservative DNA replication in nuclei isolated from cells which are synchronised in late G1 phase of the cell division cycle. We now investigate origin specificity of initiation using this system. New DNA replication foci are established upon incubation of late G1 phase nuclei in a cytosolic extract from proliferating human cells. The intranuclear sites of replication foci initiated in vitro coincide with the sites of earliest replicating DNA sequences, where DNA replication had been initiated in these nuclei in vivo upon entry into S phase of the previous cell cycle. In contrast, intranuclear sites that replicate later in S phase in vivo do not initiate in vitro. DNA replication initiates in this cell-free system site-specifically at the lamin B2 DNA replication origin, which is also activated in vivo upon release of mimosine-arrested late G1 phase cells into early S phase. In contrast, in the later replicating ribosomal DNA locus (rDNA) we neither detected replicating rDNA in the human in vitro initiation system nor upon entry of intact mimosine-arrested cells into S phase in vivo. As a control, replicating rDNA was detected in vivo after progression into mid S phase. These data indicate that early origin activity is faithfully recapitulated in the in vitro system and that late origins are not activated under these conditions, suggesting that early and late origins may be subject to different mechanisms of control.  相似文献   

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