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1.
A short-term assay utilizing a human/mouse monochromosomal hybrid cell line R3-5, to detect chemically induced aneuploidy in mammalian cells is described. A single human chromosome transferred into mouse cells was used as a cytogenetic marker to quantitate abnormal chromosome segregation following chemical treatment. The human chromosome present in the mouse cells can be readily identified by differential staining procedures. The frequency of cells containing 0 or 2 human chromosomes in the progeny of chemically treated monochromosomal hybrid cells provided a direct measure of aneuploidy. We tested the sensitivity of the proposed system with 3 model chemicals (colcemid, cyclophosphamide and benomyl) known to induce numerical or structural changes in chromosomes. The frequency of an abnormal segregation of the human chromosome was found to be dose dependent and consistently higher than controls. This system has the capability to detect gain as well as loss of a chromosome resulting from nondisjunction or other mechanisms leading to aneuploidy.  相似文献   

2.
A genetic assay is described in which a mouse/human hybrid cell line R3-5 containing a single human chromosome (a monochromosomal hybrid) is used to detect chemically induced aneuploidy. In this assay the frequency of chromosome loss determined by the cloning efficiency of the cells in a selection medium is used as an index for the potential of a chemical to induce aneuploidy. The hybrid cells are deficient in hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT) and contain human chromosome 2, marked with Ecogpt, an E. coli gene for xanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. These cells with a genotype of hgprt-/Ecogpt+ can grow in medium containing mycophenolic acid and xanthine (MX medium) but not in medium containing 6-thioguanine (6-TG). The loss of the human chromosome from R3-5 cells as a result of chemical treatment produces cells with a genotype of hgprt-/Ecogpt- which are capable of growth in the medium containing 6-TG. Thus, the cloning efficiency of cells treated with a test chemical in 6-TG provides a method to determine the frequency of cells that have lost the human chromosome. Two chemicals, colcemid and nocodazole, previously known to induce aneuploidy in mammalian cells were used for a preliminary evaluation of this test system. Both of these compounds at concentrations ranging from 0.002 to 0.032 micrograms/ml showed a concentration-related positive response in this assay.  相似文献   

3.
Resistance to phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate (PALA) is caused by CAD gene amplification. The marker chromosome of a PALA-resistant cell line containing a homogeneously staining region with amplified CAD gene was introduced into PALA-sensitive Chinese hamster cells by microcell-mediated chromosome transfer. Two monochromosomal hybrids containing the marker chromosome in addition to the normal chromosome complement of sensitive cells and 1 tetraploid hybrid containing the complete genomes of donor (resistant) and recipient (sensitive) cells were studied in detail. It was shown that (i) the presence of the marker chromosome was both a necessary and a sufficient condition for the expression of the PALA-resistant phenotype; (ii) the marker chromosome underwent rearrangements in the monochromosomal hybrids, with preferential loss of non-amplified chromosomal regions, while it was not rearranged in the tetraploid hybrid; (iii) unlike the original PALA-resistant cells obtained after long-term selection in the presence of PALA, the PALA-resistant hybrids did not show chromosomal aberrations of other than the marker chromosome. This result indicates that chromosomal aberrations may be due to the selective procedure and is not an inherent property of cells containing amplified genes.  相似文献   

4.
M S Sidhu  B K Helen  R S Athwal 《Genomics》1992,14(3):728-732
We describe here a method for DNA fingerprinting of human chromosomes by Alu-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of DNA from monochromosomal hybrids, following digestion with restriction endonucleases. DNA digestion with restriction enzymes prior to PCR amplification reduces the total number of amplified fragments. The number and pattern of bands of PCR products observed in an electrophoretic medium are chromosome specific and provide a "fingerprint signature" for individual human chromosomes. Using this approach, we have produced fingerprints for human chromosomes 2, 5, 7, 9, and 12. The applicability of this approach to chromosome identification was assessed by comparing the fingerprints obtained for two different hybrids containing chromosome 7. DNA fragments specific for the long and the short arms of human chromosome 12 have also been identified. In addition, Alu-PCR-generated DNA fragments, specific for different chromosomes, were used to probe Southern blots of a hybrid cell panel to identify human chromosomes present in hybrid cell lines. The chromosomal specificity of these probes permits the identification of intact as well as rearranged chromosomes composed of segments arising from more than one chromosome.  相似文献   

5.
"PCR-karyotype" of human chromosomes in somatic cell hybrids   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Amplification of human DNA sequences in 16 monochromosomal somatic cell hybrids containing different human chromosomes were performed by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using primer directed at human-specific regions of Alu or L1, the two major classes of interspersed repetitive sequences (IRS-PCR). A chromosome-specific pattern of amplification products was observed on agarose gels run with ethidium bromide, producing a "PCR-karyotype." This simple gel analysis provides a rapid method for identifying and monitoring the human chromosomal content of monochromosomal somatic cell hybrids without conventional cytogenetic analysis. Hybrids containing multiple human chromosome produce complex gel patterns, but identification of chromosome content can be achieved by hybridization of PCR products against a reference panel of monochromosomal or highly reduced hybrids representing each human chromosome. This dot-blot method also enables identification of human marker chromosomes or translocated pieces in hybrids that are not identifiable by cytogenetic methods. These IRS-PCR methods should greatly reduce the need for more laborious cytogenetic, isozyme, and Southern blot characterizations of human-rodent cell hybrids.  相似文献   

6.
Microcell-mediated chromosome transfer is a useful technique for the study of gene function, gene regulation, gene mapping, and functional cloning in mammalian cells. Complete panels of donor cell lines, each containing a different human chromosome, have been developed. These donor cell lines contain a single human chromosome marked with a dominant selectable gene in a rodent cell background. However, a similar panel does not exist for murine chromosomes. To produce mouse monochromosomal donor hybrids, we have utilized embryonic stem (ES) cells with targeted gene disruptions of known chromosomal location as starting material. ES cells with mutations in aprt, fyn, and myc were utilized to generate monochromosomal hybrids with neomycin phosphotransferase-marked murine Chr 8, 10, or 15 respectively in a hamster or rat background. This same methodology can be used to generate a complete panel of marked mouse chromosomes for somatic cell genetic experimentaion. Received: 28 July 1998 / Accepted: 15 December 1998  相似文献   

7.
Chung HW  Kang SJ  Kim SY 《Mutation research》2002,516(1-2):49-56
The cytokinesis-block micronucleus (CBMN) assay has emerged as one of the preferred methods for assessing chromosome damage. Micronuclei (MN) are small, extranuclear bodies that are formed in mitosis from acentric chromosomal fragments or chromosomes that are not included in each daughter nucleus. Thus, MN contain either chromosomal fragments or whole chromosomes. The CBMN assay, together with a fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) technique using specific centromeric probes for chromosomes 7 and 8, were employed in mitogen-stimulated human lymphocytes pretreated with the benzene metabolite, 1,2,4-benzenetriol (BT). Treatment of human lymphocytes resulted in the induction of MN in a dose-dependent manner. The frequency of MN in control lymphocytes was 4.5 per 1000 binucleated (BN) cells and this increased to 9.5, 14, 28 and 40 per 1000 BN cells at 10, 25, 50 and 100 microM BT, respectively. The frequency of aneuploidy 7 and 8 in BN cells also increased at each concentration. Aneuploidy 8 was more frequent than aneuploidy 7, suggesting that chromosome 8 is more sensitive to aneuploidy induction by BT. The frequency of MN containing centromere positive signals for chromosomes 7 and 8 increased with the concentration of BT. The frequency of MN with centromere positive signals was higher for chromosome 8 than for chromosome 7, also suggesting a greater sensitivity of chromosome 8 to this agent. These results suggest that combined application of the CBMN assay with a FISH technique, using chromosome-specific centromeric probes, would allow the detection of aneuploidy in human lymphocytes and identify the mechanistic origin of MN induced by a clastogen or aneugen.  相似文献   

8.
Cells defective in BRCA1 show genomic instability as evidenced by increased radiosensitivity, the presence of chromosomal abnormalities and the loss of heterozygosity at many loci. Reported chromosomal abnormalities in BRCA1 deficient cells include dicentric chromosomes. Dicentric chromosomes, in some cases, may arise as a result of end-to-end chromosome fusions, which represent signatures of telomere dysfunction. In this study we examined BRCA1 deficient human and mouse cells for the presence of chromosomal aberrations indicative of telomere dysfunction. We identified a lymphoblastoid cell line, GM14090, established from a BRCA1 carrier that showed elevated levels of dicentric chromosomes. Molecular cytogenetic analysis revealed that these dicentric chromosomes result from end-to-end chromosome fusions. The frequency of end-to-end chromosome fusions did not change after exposure of GM14090 cells to bleomycin but we observed elevated levels of chromosomal abnormalities involving interactions between DNA double strand breaks and uncapped telomeres in this cell line. We observed similar chromosomal abnormalities involving telomeres in the breast cancer cell line, HCC1937, homozygous for BRCA1 mutation. Finally, we analyzed mouse embryonic stem cells lacking functional Brca1 and observed the presence of telomere dysfunction following exposure of these cells to bleomycin. Our results reveal cytogenetic evidence of telomere dysfunction in BRCA1 deficient cells.  相似文献   

9.
Fibroblast cultures prepared from mice homozygous for a Robertsonian translocation (centric fusion) between autosomes 8 and 17 [Rb(8.17)] were used as donors in microcell-mediated chromosome transfer experiments. By using hamster recipient cells deficient in adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT-) and selecting for expression of murine APRT (a chromosome 8 marker), microcell hybrids were isolated which retained only the mouse Rb(8.17) translocation in addition to the hamster chromosome complement. The translocation was stable in cells maintained under APRT+ selective pressure, and mouse marker traits encoded by genes on both chromosomes 8 and 17 segregated concordantly. A second family of hybrid clones was constructed by fusing microcells derived from wild-type mouse fibroblasts with APRT- hamster cells. Four of six clones analyzed retained only mouse chromosome 8. These studies demonstrated that microcell hybrids containing specific Robertsonian translocations as the only donor-derived genetic material can be obtained. Furthermore, a number of Robertsonian translocations between chromosomes which carry selectable markers (chromosomes 3, 8, and 11) and other autosomes have been described. By using fibroblast cultures prepared from mice containing these translocations as donors in microcell fusions, 18 of the 20 mouse chromosomes could be selectively fixed in different hybrid clones. Thus, a collection of 20 hybrid clones, each containing a single, specific mouse chromosome, can be constructed by using the strategy described in this report. The potential utility of such a monochromosomal hybrid panel is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
We have used 16 human × mouse somatic cell hybrids containing a variable number of human chromosomes to demonstrate that the human α-globin gene is on chromosome 16. Globin gene sequences were detected by annealing purified human α-globin complementary DNA to DNA extracted from hybrid cells. Human and mouse chromosomes were distinguished by Hoechst fluorescent centromeric banding, and the individual human chromosomes were identified in the same spreads by Giemsa trypsin banding. Isozyme markers for 17 different human chromosomes were also tested in the 16 clones which have been characterized. The absence of chromosomal translocation in all hybrid clones strongly positive for the α-globin gene was established by differential staining of mouse and human chromosomes with Giemsa 11 staining. The presence of human chromosomes in hybrid cell clones which were devoid of human α-globin genes served to exclude all human chromosomes except 6, 9, 14 and 16. Among the clones negative for human α-globin sequences, one contained chromosome 2 (JFA 14a 5), three contained chromosome 4 (AHA 16E, AHA 3D and WAV R4D) and two contained chromosome 5 (AHA 16E and JFA14a 13 5) in >10% of metaphase spreads. These data excluded human chromosomes 2, 4 and 5 which had been suggested by other investigators to contain human globin genes. Only chromosome 16 was present in each one of the three hybrid cell clones found to be strongly positive for the human α-globin gene. Two clones (WAIV A and WAV) positive for the human α-globin gene and chromosome 16 were counter-selected in medium which kills cells retaining chromosome 16. In each case, the resulting hybrid populations lacked both human chromosome 16 and the α-globin gene. These studies establish the localization of the human α-globin gene to chromosome 16 and represent the first assignment of a nonexpressed unique gene by direct detection of its DNA sequences in somatic cell hybrids.  相似文献   

11.
An unbalanced chromosome number (aneuploidy) is present in most malignant tumours and has been attributed to mitotic mis-segregation of chromosomes. However, recent studies have shown a relatively high rate of chromosomal mis-segregation also in non-neoplastic human cells, while the frequency of aneuploid cells remains low throughout life in most normal tissues. This implies that newly formed aneuploid cells are subject to negative selection in healthy tissues and that attenuation of this selection could contribute to aneuploidy in cancer. To test this, we modelled cellular growth as discrete time branching processes, during which chromosome gains and losses were generated and their host cells subjected to selection pressures of various magnitudes. We then assessed experimentally the frequency of chromosomal mis-segregation as well as the prevalence of aneuploid cells in human non-neoplastic cells and in cancer cells. Integrating these data into our models allowed estimation of the fitness reduction resulting from a single chromosome copy number change to an average of ≈30% in normal cells. In comparison, cancer cells showed an average fitness reduction of only 6% (p = 0.0008), indicative of aneuploidy tolerance. Simulations based on the combined presence of chromosomal mis-segregation and aneuploidy tolerance reproduced distributions of chromosome aberrations in >400 cancer cases with higher fidelity than models based on chromosomal mis-segregation alone. Reverse engineering of aneuploid cancer cell development in silico predicted that aneuploidy intolerance is a stronger limiting factor for clonal expansion of aneuploid cells than chromosomal mis-segregation rate. In conclusion, our findings indicate that not only an elevated chromosomal mis-segregation rate, but also a generalised tolerance to novel chromosomal imbalances contribute to the genomic landscape of human tumours.  相似文献   

12.
We report that the presence of an extra Y chromosome can be used as a marker for the induction of aneuploidy (mitotic non-disjunction) in a human lymphoblastoid cell line. This endpoint is easily visualized in metaphase chromosome preparations after staining with quinacrine mustard. The induction of cells with two Y chromosomes by nitrogen mustard (NM) was examined. Exposure to 150 ng/ml nitrogen mustard induced a 6-fold increase in aneuploid frequency relative to untreated control levels; maximal induction of aneuploidy was observed 2 days after treatment. Lower concentrations of nitrogen mustard (36 and 75 ng/ml) induced smaller increases in aneuploid frequency, with maximal induction observed 1 day after treatment. This system has the potential to be used as an assay for the induction of aneuploidy in cultured human cells.  相似文献   

13.
Because of their somatic cell origin, human induced pluripotent stem cells (HiPSCs) are assumed to carry a normal diploid genome, and adaptive chromosomal aberrations have not been fully evaluated. Here, we analyzed the chromosomal integrity of 66 HiPSC and 38 human embryonic stem cell (HESC) samples from 18 different studies by global gene expression meta-analysis. We report identification of a substantial number of cell lines carrying full and partial chromosomal aberrations, half of which were validated at the DNA level. Several aberrations resulted from culture adaptation, and others are suspected to originate from the parent somatic cell. Our classification revealed a third type of aneuploidy already evident in early passage HiPSCs, suggesting considerable selective pressure during the reprogramming process. The analysis indicated high incidence of chromosome 12 duplications, resulting in significant enrichment for cell cycle-related genes. Such aneuploidy may limit the differentiation capacity and increase the tumorigenicity of HiPSCs.  相似文献   

14.
Elimination of uniparental chromosomes occurs frequently in interspecific hybrid cells. For example, human chromosomes are always eliminated during clone formation when human cells are fused with mouse cells. However, the underlying mechanisms are still elusive. Here, we show that the elimination of human chromosomes in human–mouse hybrid cells is accompanied by continued cell division at the presence of DNA damage on human chromosomes. Deficiency in DNA damage repair on human chromosomes occurs after cell fusion. Furthermore, increasing the level of DNA damage on human chromosomes by irradiation accelerates human chromosome loss in hybrid cells. Our results indicate that the elimination of human chromosomes in human–mouse hybrid cells results from unrepaired DNA damage on human chromosomes. We therefore provide a novel mechanism underlying chromosome instability which may facilitate the understanding of carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

15.
When treated with an anti-kinetochore antibody present in the sera of scleroderma (var. CREST) patients, most chromosomes exhibit kinetochore dots at the position of the centromere. In this paper we report that some chromosomes in the mouse x human somatic cell hybrid fail to show these dots. In the early passages in a hybrid, HYG-1, the frequency of such chromosomes was higher (0.85%) than in later passages (0.45%) studied after five months of continuous culturing. In parallel, the mean number of human chromosomes in the hybrid also dropped. The somewhat hypodiploid parental cell lines, when similarly treated, showed only a rare chromosome without kinetochore dots. Immunoblots of the proteins showed that the sera used for kinetochore detection recognized all major centromere proteins (CENPs). Electron microscopy of some offlying metaphase chromosomes in another hybrid, HR61, exhibited a lack of trilamellar kinetochores. This study suggests that akinetochoric chromosomes might provide a novel mechanism responsible for chromosome loss and genesis of aneuploidy. In early passages, some cells in the hybrid showed detached kinetochores. These autonomous kinetochores could be seen in clusters and involved some mouse chromosomes also. Potential significance of these autonomous kinetochores in generating compound centromeres is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Sorting of human--mouse or human--hamster hybrid cells with particular human chromosomes was performed by in situ hybridization. Total human genomic DNA was heavily labelled with. H and hybridized to metaphase spreads from hybrid clone cells. The method allowed us to not only identify human chromosomes in hybrid cells but also to detect terminal translocations and insertions from 1-2 bands in length to large ones. Biochemical markers of some human chromosomes were analysed using electrophoretic technique in the clones selected. Cytogenetic analysis (G staining) of these clones was made to visualize human chromosomes. Total 99 initial hybrid human--hamster and 26 human--mouse clones were obtained. 53 clones were analysed by in situ hybridization, only one of them being monochromosomal; the latter contained human X chromosome on the background of Chinese hamster chromosomes. Two other monochromosomal clones containing particular 15 and 21 chromosomes, respectively, were obtained by more complicated way from human--mouse hybrid clones using back selection, repeated hybridization and passing through a number of subsequent subclonings.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Prior studies have shown a preferential decondensation (or fragmentation) of the heterochromatic long arm of the X chromosome of Chinese hamster ovary cells when treated with carcinogenic crystalline NiS particles (crNiS). In this report, we show that the heterochromatic regions of mouse chromosomes are also more frequently involved in aberrations than euchromatic regions, although the heterochromatin in mouse cells is restricted to centromeric regions. We also present the karyotypic analyses of four cell lines derived from tumors induced by leg muscle injections of crystalline nickel sulfide which have been analyzed to determine whether heterochromatic chromosomal regions are preferentially altered in the transformed genotypes. Common to all cell lines was the presence of minichromosomes, which are acrocentric chromosomes smaller than chromosome 19, normally the smallest chromosome of the mouse karyotype. The minichromosomes were present in a majority of cells of each line although the morphology of this extra chromosome varied significantly among the cell lines. C-banding revealed the presence of centromeric DNA and thus these minichromosomes may be the result of chromosome breaks at or near the centromere. In three of the four lines a marker chromosome could be identified as a rearrangement between two chromosomes. In the fourth cell line a rearranged chromosome was present in only 15% of the cells and was not studied in detail. One of the three major marker chromosomes resulted from a centromeric fusion of chromosome 4 while another appeared to be an interchange involving the centromere of chromosome 2 and possibly the telomeric region of chromosome 17. The third marker chromosome involves a rearrangement between chromosome 4 near the telomeric region and what appears to be the centromeric region of chromosome 19. Thus, in these three major marker chromosomes centromeric heterochromatic DNA is clearly implicated in two of the rearrangements and less clearly in the third. The involvement of centromeric DNA in the formation of even two of four markers is consistent with the previously observed preference in the site of action of crNiS for heterochromatic DNA during the early stages of carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

18.
Chromosome mapping of the murine syndecan gene.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The chromosomal localization of the murine syndecan gene was determined by analysis of DNA from a panel of mouse-hamster cell hybrids containing various mouse chromosomes, detection of immunoreactive syndecan in culture medium of these cells, and linkage analysis of a mouse interspecific backcross. Southern analysis of the mouse-hamster cell hybrid DNA shows two distinct hybridizing sequences, one on mouse Chromosome 12 and the other on the X chromosome. Localization of the syndecan gene to mouse Chromosome 12 was determined by detection of immunoreactive syndecan in the culture medium of cell hybrids containing mouse Chromosome 12. Hybrids containing other mouse chromosomes were negative. Linkage analysis by Southern hybridization of DNA from a mouse interspecific backcross using a syndecan-specific probe localized the syndecan gene locus, Synd, to the proximal end of Chromosome 12, tightly linked to the Pomc-1 and Nmyc loci. The syndecan gene is likely on human Chromosome 2 because this region shows conservation of synteny between mouse and human chromosomes.  相似文献   

19.
A genetic assay to detect the clastogenic potential of environmental agents is described. This assay is based on the cloning efficiency of cells in a medium that permits the growth of cells following loss of a specific chromosome segment resulting from a chromosome break. For this purpose a mouse/human hybrid cell line R12-2 containing a dominantly marked chromosome 5 as the only human component has been constructed. This chromosome 5 carries two dominant selectable markers, Ecogpt and the gene for sensitivity to diphtheria toxin (DTs). Ecogpt codes for the enzyme xanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase which allows selection for cells containing chromosome 5 or the segment carrying Ecogpt as judged by growth in medium supplemented with mycophenolic acid and xanthine (MX medium). Human cells are sensitive to 10(-13) M DT, whereas mouse cells are resistant to 10(-7) M DT and DTs is expressed as a dominant phenotype. Cultivation of R12-2 cells in the medium containing 10(-13) M DT permit the selection of cells that have lost chromosome 5 or the segment carrying DTs. The presence of two selectable markers on the same chromosome permits the identification and quantitation of cells for the selective loss of a specific chromosome segment. Growth of R12-2 cells in MX medium containing 10(-13) M DT therefore, provides a convenient method to determine the frequency of clastogen induced breaks in chromosome 5. The utility of the proposed genetic assay is assessed using X-irradiation as a model clastogen. Our results clearly show a dose related response that is consistent with cytogenetic observations.  相似文献   

20.
Variations in cultivation conditions were found to exert influence on the distribution of cells for chromosome number by changing the modal class. The change of the HMEM medium for the EMEM medium during 2-6 passages results in the appearance of a new modal class with 16 chromosomes. The change in the chromosome number is preferably due to the loss of one X chromosome within the main structural variant of the karyotype (MSVK). On the other hand, the change of the HMEM medium for the F12 medium during 4-6 passages does not affect the cell distribution for the chromosome number. A comparative analysis of the total frequency of the MSVK cells and that of MSVK cells of the modal class showed that the karyotypic changes took place in all the variants, both in the modal class and beyond it due to other additive SVK. An exception is the variant NBLD (change of HMEM for the F12 during 6 passages). In this case chromosome changes occur mostly in the modal class, primarily due to the redistribution of chromosomes in groups. In all the variants there is an insignificant frequency of chromosomes, morphologically different from the MSVK. This confirms the findings according to which chromosomal changeability in the NBLD may be associated mostly with the change in the number of homologous chromosomes rather than with chromosomal aberrations. The frequency of chromosomal aberrations is the same in all the variants examined. The dependence of karyotypic characteristics on culture media mentioned above indicate that care should be taken in choice of culture conditions for permanent cell lines.  相似文献   

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