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1.
The fluorescence and circular dichroism of quinacrine complexed with nucleic acids and chromatin were measured to estimate the relative magnitudes of factors influencing the fluorescence banding patterns of chromosomes stained with quinacrine or quinacrine mustard. DNA base composition can influence quinacrine fluorescence in at least two ways. The major effect, evident at low ratios of quinacrine to DNA, is a quenching of dye fluorescence, correlating with G-C composition. This may occur largely prior to relaxation of excited dye molecules. At higher dye/DNA saturations, which might exist in cytological chromosome preparations stained with high concentrations of quinacrine, energy transfer between dye molecules converts dyes bound near G-C base pairs into energy sinks. In contrast to its influence on quinacrine fluorescence, DNA base composition has very little effect on either quinacrine binding affinity or the circular dichroism of bound quinacrine molecules. The synthetic polynucleotides poly(dA-dT) and poly(dA)-poly(dT) have a similar effect on quinacrine fluorescence, but differ markedly in their affinity for quinacrine and in the circular dichroism changes associated with quinacrine binding. Quinacrine fluorescence intensity and lifetime are slightly less when bound to calf thymus chromatin than when bound to calf thymus DNA, and minor differences in circular dichroism between these complexes are observed. Chromosomal proteins probably affect the fluorescence of chromosomes stained with quinacrine, although this effect appears to be much less than that due to variations in DNA base composition. The fluorescence of cytological chromosome preparations may also be influenced by fixation effects and macroscopic variations in chromosome coiling.  相似文献   

2.
The binding of proflavine to DNA has been studied by measuring the polarization and intensity of emission of DNA–dye complexes. Such measurements also permit the determination of the fluorescence of the bound dye as a function of the degree of binding. Techniques of emission spectroscopy permit the study of complexing at high phosphate to dye ratios, and we have examined complexes formed at up to 12,300:1 phosphates to dye. At high phosphate to dye ratios, we find that equilibrium plots of the binding data show only one type of binding. Reports in the literature of multiple binding constants are shown to be due to the incorrect assumption that the fluorescence of the bound dye is independent of the amount bound. The emission properties can be qualitatively accounted for by assuming that nearest-neighbor interaction between bound dyes quenches the fluorescence. We report that, within experimental error, the binding constant is insensitive to the base content of the DNA. The DNA-dye complexes show a temperature dependent depolarization, the cause of which is, as yet, unknown. Heat denaturation of the DNA–dye complex may be followed on a Perrin plot.  相似文献   

3.
Interactions of pyronin Y(G) with nucleic acids   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Spectral properties of pyronin Y(PY) alone or in complexes with natural and synthetic nucleic acids of various base compositions have been studied in aqueous solution containing 10 or 150 mM NaCl and 5 mM Hepes at pH 7.0. The dimerization constant (KD = 6.27 X 10(3), M-1) and the absorption spectra of the dye in monomeric and dimeric form were established. The complexes of PY with single-stranded (ss) nucleic acids show a hypsochromic shift in absorption, and their fluorescence is quenched by over 90% compared to free dye. In contrast, complexes with double-stranded (ds) RNA or DNA (binding by intercalation) exhibit a bathochromic shift in their absorption (excitation) spectrum, and their fluorescence is correlated with the base composition of the binding site. Namely, guanine quenches fluorescence of PY by up to 90%, whereas A, C, I, T, and U bases exert a rather minor effect on the fluorescence quantum yield of the dye. The intrinsic association constant of the dye to ds RNA (Ki = 6.96 X 10(4), M-1) and to ds DNA (Ki = 1.74 X 10(4), M-1) was measured in 150 mM NaCl; the binding site size was 2-3 base pair for both polymers. Implications of these findings for qualitative and quantitative cytochemistry of nucleic acids are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The interaction between the fluorescent dye YO (oxazole yellow) and the alternating polynucleotides [poly(dA-dT)]2[the duplex of alternating poly(dA-dT)]and [poly(dG-dC)]2[the duplex of alternating poly(dG-dC)] has been studied with optical spectroscopic techniques including absorbance, flow linear dichroism, CD, and fluorescence measurements. The principal features of the spectra are very similar for the two polynucleotide solutions, showing that YO binds quite similarly to AT and GC base pairs. From a strongly negative reduced linear dichroism (LDr) in the dye absorption band, an induced negative CD, and transfer of energy from the bases to bound YO, we conclude that at low mixing ratios YO is intercalated in both [poly(dA-dT)]2 and [poly(dG-dC)]2. At higher mixing ratios an external binding mode starts to contribute, evidenced from the appearance of an exciton CD. The conclusion that YO binds in a similar way to AT and GC base pairs should be valid also for the dimer YOYO since its YO units have been found to bind to double-stranded (dsDNA) in the same way as the YO monomer. The fluorescence properties of YO and YOYO complexed with DNA or the polynucleotides have been characterized by studying the dependence of fluorescence intensity on temperature, mixing ratio, and ionic strength. The fluorescence intensity and fluorescence lifetime of YO-DNA decrease strongly with increasing mixing ratio, whereas the fluorescence intensity of YOYO-DNA shows a weaker dependence, indicating that the quantum yield depends on the distance between the YO chromophores on the DNA chain. Further, the fluorescence intensity of YO depends on the base sequence; the quantum yield and fluorescence lifetime for YO complexed with [poly(dG-dC)]2 are about twice as large as for YO complexed with [poly(dA-dT)]2. Measurements of excitation spectra at different mixing ratios and different emission wavelengths indicate that the fluorescence of the externally bound chromophores is negligible compared to the intercalated ones. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
The ability to accurately quantify specific nucleic acid molecules in complex biomolecule solutions in real time is important in diagnostic and basic research. Here we describe a DNA-PNA (peptide nucleic acid) hybridization assay that allows sensitive quantification of specific nucleic acids in solution and concomitant detection of select single base mutations in resulting DNA-PNA duplexes. The technique employs so-called FIT (forced intercalation) probes in which one base is replaced by a thiazole orange (TO) dye molecule. If a DNA molecule that is complementary to the FIT-PNA molecule (except at the site of the dye) hybridizes to the probe, the TO dye exhibits intense fluorescence because stacking in the duplexes enforces a coplanar arrangement even in the excited state. However, a base mismatch at either position immediately adjacent to the TO dye dramatically decreases fluorescence, presumably because the TO dye has room to undergo torsional motions that lead to rapid depletion of the excited state. Of note, we found that the use of d-ornithine rather than aminoethylglycine as the PNA backbone increases the intensity of fluorescence emitted by matched probe-target duplexes while specificity of fluorescence signaling under nonstringent conditions is also increased. The usefulness of the ornithine-containing FIT probes was demonstrated in the real-time PCR analysis providing a linear measurement range over at least seven orders of magnitude. The analysis of two important single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the CFTR gene confirmed the ability of FIT probes to facilitate unambiguous SNP calls for genomic DNA by quantitative PCR.  相似文献   

6.
The interactions of two phenazine derivatives, one with a neutral chromophore (glycoside) and the other with a cationic one (quaternary salt), with various synthetic single- and double-stranded polynucleotides and natural DNA were studied by fluorescence techniques, conducting measurements of steady-state fluorescence intensity and polarization degree as well as fluorescence lifetime. These dyes show fluorescence quenching upon intercalation into the GC sequences of the double-stranded nucleic acids and an increase in fluorescence emission and lifetime upon incorporation into the AT and AU sequences. GC base pairs in continuous deoxynucleotide sequences were found to be preferred as binding sites for both phenazines, in contrast to AT base pairs. On the contrary, the continuous ribonucleotide GC sequence binds the phenazines more weakly than does the AU sequence. With regard to the interaction of the phenazines with single-stranded polynucleotides, a stacking interaction of the dye chromophores with the nucleic bases was observed. In that case the guanine residue quenches the cationic phenazine fluorescence, while the stacking interaction with the other bases results in an increase in the fluorescence quantum yield. Unlike the cationic dye, the fluorescence of the neutral phenazine was quenched by both purine bases.  相似文献   

7.
S Ichimura 《Biopolymers》1975,14(5):1033-1047
Fluorescence of acridine orange bound to RNA or DNA in the single-stranded form including single-stranded synthetic polyribo- or polydeoxyribonucleotides was measured in the expectation that some distinct structural characteristic between single-stranded RNA and DNA might be reflected by a specific fluorescent behaviour of bound dyes. It was found that the complex of the dye with single-stranded RNA emits a weaker red fluorescence around 650 nm than the complex with single-stranded DNA at low phosphate-to-dye ratios. The fact could be explained neither by a direct interaction of bound dyes with the 2′-hydroxyl group of ribose in RNA nor by the difference in the G-C content of the nucleic acids. On the basis of the character of dye molecules emitting the red fluorescence, it was suggested that the bases in single-stranded RNA might be buried in some hydrophobic environment that would make the dyes less likely to interact with them, compared with the bases in single-stranded DNA. It was further inferred that some conformational rigidity of single-stranded RNA may partially be responsible for the weaker red fluorescence.  相似文献   

8.
E A Winzeler  E W Small 《Biochemistry》1991,30(21):5304-5313
The effects of pH on the torsional flexibility of DNA bound to nucleosome core particles were investigated by using time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy decays of intercalated ethidium. The decays were collected by using time-resolved single-photon counting and were fit to a model developed by J. M. Schurr [(1984) Chem. Phys. 84, 71-96] with a nonlinear least-squares-fitting algorithm developed for this purpose. As the torsional flexibility of DNA is affected by the presence of an intercalating dye, the decays were studied at different ethidium bromide to core particle binding ratios. Because we see large increases in DNA flexibility and in the rotational diffusion coefficient at binding ratios of 0.6 ethidium/core particle and above, we conclude that, under these conditions, the DNA begins to detach from the protein. At lower binding ratios, we observe only small changes in the anisotropy decay. The torsional parameters obtained are a function of N, the number of base pairs of DNA between points of attachment to the histone core. Only if N is greater than 30 base pairs is the torsional rigidity of DNA on a nucleosome core particle higher than that for DNA free in solution. Also, for reasonable values of N (less than 30), the friction felt by the DNA on a core particle is much higher than that felt by free DNA. This indicates that the region of the DNA to which the ethidium binds is highly constrained in its motions. pH changes nearly neutrality at moderate ionic strengths (100 mM) have a substantial effect on the fluorescence anisotropy decays, particularly at early times. These analyses indicated that the observed change on increasing pH can be attributed either to a loosening of the contacts between the DNA and the histone core (increasing N) or to a substantial relaxing of the torsional rigidity of the DNA.  相似文献   

9.
DAPI is a drug that interacts with double-stranded nucleic acids, binding preferentially to A + T base pairs. The interaction is not intercalative, therefore providing a useful model for mimicking the effect of functional molecules in modifying specific sites, namely, A + T segments, of significance in gene expression. Knowledge of the nature of such interaction has been enriched by additional information obtained from comparative analysis of the data acquired by uv spectroscopy and fluorescence. Two classes of binding sites, defined by different apparent affinity constants and numbers of binding sites, are evident. All types of interaction are dependent on the nucleic acid/dye ratio and on the ionic strength of the medium.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction of the bisbenzimidazole dye 33258 Hoechst with DNA and chromatin is characterized by changes in absorption, fluorescence, and circular dichroism measurements. At low dye/phosphate ratios, dye binding is accompanied by intense fluorescence and circular dichroism and exhibits little sensitivity to ionic strength. At higher dye/phosphate ratios, additional dye binding can be detected by further changes in absorptivity. This secondary binding is suppressed by increasing the ionic strength. A-T rich DNA sequences enhance both dye binding and fluorescence quantum yield, while chromosomal proteins apparently exclude the dye from approximately half of the sites available with DNA. Fluorescence of the free dye is sensitive to pH and, below pH 8, to quenching by iodide ion. Substitution of 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) for thymidine in synthetic polynucleotides, DNA, or unfixed chromatin quenches the fluorescence of bound dye. This suppression of dye fluorescence permits optical detection of BrdU incorporation associated with DNA synthesis in cytological chromosome preparations. Quenching of 33258 Hoechst fluorescence by BrdU can be abolished by appropriate alterations in solvent conditions, thereby revealing changes in dye fluorescence of microscopic specimens specifically due to BrdU incorporation.  相似文献   

11.
A novel approach to the design of sensitive fluorescent probes for nucleic acids detection is proposed. Suitable modifications of tri- and pentamethine cyanine dyes in the polymethine chain and/or in the heterocyclic residues can result in a significant decrease in unbound dye fluorescence intensity and an increase in dye emission intensity in the presence of DNA compared to the unsubstituted dye. The sharp enhancement in the fluorescence intensity upon dye interaction with double-stranded DNA permits the application of the modified tri- and pentamethine dyes as fluorescent probes in double-stranded DNA detection in homogeneous assays.  相似文献   

12.
Fluorescence of proflavine--DNA complexes: heterogeneity of binding sites   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
J C Thomes  G Weill  M Daune 《Biopolymers》1969,8(5):647-669
Measurements of the relative quantum yield of fluorescence of proflavine bound to DNA as a function of the number of bound dyes per nucleotide and the ionic strength allow the determination of the binding constants and respective number of the two types of sites previously postulated. It is demonstrated that 2–3% of the base pairs form sites where the dye is strongly bound and fluoresces normally while in the other set of sites the binding constant is 3–4 times weaker and the fluorescence completely quenched. Comparison with complexes of Pro with double stranded polynucleotides poly (A + U), poly (I + C), poly(G + C), confirm that the strong binding sites correspond to A-T-rich regions of the DNA while the quenched sites seem to require the presence of a neighboring guanine. The role of charge transfer in quenching of fluorescence and mutagnic action is considered. An original method for the determination of free dye and bound dye, based upon the use of an external quencher is described in the Appendix.  相似文献   

13.

Background

Rapid reliable diagnostics of DNA mutations are highly desirable in research and clinical assays. Current development in this field goes simultaneously in two directions: 1) high-throughput methods, and 2) portable assays. Non-enzymatic approaches are attractive for both types of methods since they would allow rapid and relatively inexpensive detection of nucleic acids. Modern fluorescence microscopy is having a huge impact on detection of biomolecules at previously unachievable resolution. However, no straightforward methods to detect DNA in a non-enzymatic way using fluorescence microscopy and nucleic acid analogues have been proposed so far.

Methods and Results

Here we report a novel enzyme-free approach to efficiently detect cancer mutations. This assay includes gene-specific target enrichment followed by annealing to oligonucleotides containing locked nucleic acids (LNAs) and finally, detection by fluorescence microscopy. The LNA containing probes display high binding affinity and specificity to DNA containing mutations, which allows for the detection of mutation abundance with an intercalating EvaGreen dye. We used a second probe, which increases the overall number of base pairs in order to produce a higher fluorescence signal by incorporating more dye molecules. Indeed we show here that using EvaGreen dye and LNA probes, genomic DNA containing BRAF V600E mutation could be detected by fluorescence microscopy at low femtomolar concentrations. Notably, this was at least 1000-fold above the potential detection limit.

Conclusion

Overall, the novel assay we describe could become a new approach to rapid, reliable and enzyme-free diagnostics of cancer or other associated DNA targets. Importantly, stoichiometry of wild type and mutant targets is conserved in our assay, which allows for an accurate estimation of mutant abundance when the detection limit requirement is met. Using fluorescence microscopy, this approach presents the opportunity to detect DNA at single-molecule resolution and directly in the biological sample of choice.  相似文献   

14.
The absorbance spectra, fluorescence emission and excitation spectra, and fluorescence anisotropy of the potential-sensitive styryl dye RH421 have been investigated in aqueous solution and bound to the lipid membrane. The potential-sensitive response of the dye has been studied using a preparation of membrane fragments containing a high density of Na+, K(+)-ATPase molecules. In aqueous solution the dye is sensitive both to changes in pH and ionic strength. Evidence has been found that the dye readily aggregates in aqueous solution. Aggregation is enhanced by an increase in ionic strength. The aggregates formed display a low fluorescence intensity. At high pH values (above approx. 8) changes in the dye's fluorescence spectra are observed, which may be due to a reaction of the dye with hydroxide ions. When bound to the membrane the dye also exhibits concentration-dependent fluorescence changes. The potential-sensitive response of the dye in Na(+),K(+)-ATPase membrane fragments after addition of MgATP in the presence of Na+ ions cannot be explained by a purely electrochromic mechanism. The results are consistent with either a potential-dependent equilibrium between membrane-bound dye monomers and membrane-bound dimers, similar to that previously proposed for the dye merocyanine 540, or with a field-induced structural change of the membrane.  相似文献   

15.
Spectral properties of acridine orange (AO) alone or in complexes with natural and synthetic nucleic acids of various base composition have been studied in aqueous solutions by absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy. The dimerization constant and absorption spectra of the dye in monomeric and dimeric form were established; dimerization of AO resulted in quenching of its fluorescence. Complexes of the dye with synthetic nucleic acids differed in the degree of enhancement of fluorescence quantum yield, varying between 1.42 to 2.38 fold as compared to AO monomer; these differences, however, were not base-dependent. Affinity of the dye to natural and synthetic polymers was studied and analyzed using McGhee-von Hippel model of polymer-ligand interactions. Because the sterical requirement for intercalative binding assumes interaction of dye monomer, the correction for AO dimerization was made in all calculations. All studied DNAs (natural and synthetic ones, the latter being homopolymer pairs or alternating copolymers of A,T or G,C or I,C base composition) had similar intrinsic association constants (KI = 5 X 10(4) - 1 X 10(5), M-1) and binding site size (n = 2.0-2.4 b.p.). The exception was poly(dA).poly(dT), having KI = 1.2 X 10(4) and n = 19.3 b.p. The results of KI measurement for calf thymus DNA and AO in different sodium ion concentration were in good agreement with predictions of the counterion condensation theory. The intercalation of AO into DNA is discussed in view of recent theoretical models of DNA-ligand interactions.  相似文献   

16.
Multiple binding modes for Hoechst 33258 to DNA   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Two binding modes for the bisbenzimidazole Hoechst 33258 to native DNA at physiological conditions have been distinguished. Type 1 binding, which dominated at low dye/phosphate ratios (D/P less than 0.05) or low dye concentrations, had a high quantum yield of fluorescence with maximum emission at 460 nm. Binding of the dye at type 2 sites (0.05 less than D/P less than 0.4) lead to quenching of fluorescence from type 1 bound dye, presumably by nonradiative energy transfer. Fluorescence quantum yield of type 2 bound dye was low (phi = 0.05-0.1) and it peaked around 490 nm. At D/P greater than 0.4, the dye/DNA complex precipitated. This was caused by an additional dye-DNA interaction that was strongly cooperative. The anomalous dispersion of the refractive index of the complex changed abruptly around D/P = 0.4, indicating that the precipitating dye-DNA interaction involved strong electronic interaction between dye molecules. Hoechst 33258 precipitated polynucleotides irrespective of strandedness and base composition when dye concentration was raised above 1 X 10(-5) M. In the presence of 25% ethanol, type 2 binding to DNA did not occur, whereas the binding constant for type 1 binding (kappa = 2 X 10(3) M-1) was about two orders of magnitude smaller than in physiological buffer. DNA was not precipitated by high concentrations of Hoechst 33258 in 25% ethanol.  相似文献   

17.
The purpose of this study was to characterize the ternary complexes formed in the reaction of cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) (cis-DDP) and nucleic acids, in the presence of the intercalating compound ethidium bromide (EtBr). In these ternary complexes, some EtBr is tightly bound to the nucleic acids. Tight binding is defined by resistance to extraction with butanol, assayed by filtration at acid pH or thin layer chromatography at basic pH. These ternary complexes are formed with double stranded but not with single stranded nucleic acids. They are not formed if cis-DDP is replaced by transdiamminedichloroplatinum(II). The amount of tightly bound EtBr depends upon the sequence of the nucleic acid, being larger with poly (dG-dC).poly(dG-dC) than with poly(dG).poly(dC). Spectroscopic results support the hypothesis that the tight binding of the dye is due to the formation of a bidentate adduct (guanine-EtBr)cis-platin. The visible spectrum of the ternary complexes is blue-shifted as compared to that of EtBr intercalated between the base pairs of unplatinated DNA and it depends upon the conformation of the ternary complex. The fluorescence quantum yield of the ternary complexes is lower than that of free EtBr in water. Tightly bound EtBr stabilizes strongly the B form versus the Z form of the ternary complex poly(dG-dC)-Pt-EtBr and slows down the transition from the B form towards the Z form. The sequence specificity of cis-DDP binding to a DNA restriction fragment in the absence or presence of EtBr is mapped by means of the 3'----5' exonuclease activity of T4 DNA polymerase. In the absence of the dye, all the d(GpG) sites and all the d(ApG) sites but one in the sequence d(TpGpApGpC) are platinated. The d(GpA) sites are not platinated. In the presence of EtBr, some new sites are detected. These results might help to explain the synergism for drugs used in combination with cis-DDP and in the design of new chemotherapeutic agents.  相似文献   

18.
Although the green-red fluorescence of AO is an accepted measure of DNA-RNA content, respectively, it is actually a measure of the fluorescence of dye bound to nucleic acids, and may vary with changes in accessibility to the dye. It has been shown for example that extraction of nuclear proteins results in a marked increase in DNA stainability. Moreover, in certain cell systems the binding of fluorochromes correlates with structural modifications in chromatin that accompany cell differentiation. We report here that changes in green & red fluorescence intensity also occur in long-term monocyte cultures. The increased red fluorescence intensity observed in cultured monocytes may reflect ribosomal RNA synthesis and the increased green fluorescence enhanced AO accessibility to DNA due to changes in chromatin organization. We compared cultured monocytes from bladder cancer patients and healthy donors. The results indicate a small but statistically significantly greater increase in mean green & red fluorescence of cultured monocytes from the cancer patients. These fluorescence variations may indicate differences in the immunologic status of cancer patients and/or be related to disease state.  相似文献   

19.
Accurate measurement of single DNA fragments by DNA fragment sizing flow cytometry (FSFC) depends upon precise, stoichiometric DNA staining by the intercalating dye molecules. In this study, we determined the binding characteristics of a commercially available 532 nm wavelength-excitable dye and used this information to develop a universal DNA staining protocol for DNA FSFC using a compact frequency-doubled Nd:YAG laser excitation source. Among twelve 532 nm wavelength-excitable nucleic acid staining dyes tested, SYTOX Orange stain showed the highest fluorescence intensity along with a large fluorescence enhancement upon binding to double-stranded DNA ( approximately 450-fold). Furthermore, using SYTOX Orange stain, accurate fragment-size-distribution histograms were consistently obtained without regard to the staining dye to base pair (dye/bp) ratio. A model describing two binding modes, intercalation (primary, yielding fluorescence) and external binding (secondary, involving fluorescence quenching), was proposed to interpret the performance of the dyes under different dye/bp ratios. The secondary equilibrium dissociation constant was found to be the most critical parameter in determining the sensitivity of each fluorophore to the staining dye/bp ratio. The measurements of both equilibrium dissociation constants provided us with a theoretical framework for developing a universal protocol which was successfully demonstrated over a wide range of DNA concentrations on a compact flow cytometer equipped with a frequency-doubled, diode-pumped, solid-state Nd:YAG laser for rapid and sensitive DNA fragment sizing.  相似文献   

20.
We used intensity and fluorescence lifetime microscopy (FLIM) of 3T3 nuclei to investigate the existence of AT-rich and GC-rich regions of the nuclear DNA. Hoechst 33258 (Ho) and 7-aminoactinomycin D (7-AAD) were used as fluorescence probes specific for AT and GC base pairs, respectively. YOYO-1 (Yo) was used as a dye that displays distinct fluorescence lifetimes when bound to AT or GC base pairs. We combined fluorescence imaging of Ho and 7-AAD with time-resolved measurements of Yo and took advantage of an additional information content of the time-resolved fluorescence. Because a single nucleus could not be stained and measured with all three dyes, we used texture analysis to compare the spatial distribution of AT-rich and GC-rich DNA in 100 nuclei in different phases of the cell cycle. The fluorescence intensity-based analysis of Ho- or 7-AAD-stained images indicates increased number and larger size of the DNA condensation centers in the G2/M-phases compared to G0/1-phases. The lifetime-based study of Yo-stained images suggests spatial separation of the AT- or GC-rich DNA regions in the G2/M-phase. Texture analysis of fluorescence intensity and lifetime images was used to quantitatively study the spatial change of condensation and separation of AT- and GC-rich DNA during the cell cycle.  相似文献   

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