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2.
The Romanowsky-Giemsa staining (RG staining) has been studied by means of microspectrophotometry using various staining conditions. As cell material we employed in our model experiments mouse fibroblasts, LM cells. They show a distinct Romanowsky-Giemsa staining pattern. The RG staining was performed with the chemical pure dye stuffs azure B and eosin Y. In addition we stained the cells separately with azure B or eosin Y. Staining parameters were pH value, dye concentration, staining time etc. Besides normal LM cells we also studied cells after RNA or DNA digestion. The spectra of the various cell species were measured with a self constructed microspectrophotometer by photon counting technique. The optical ray pass and the diagramm of electronics are briefly discussed. The nucleus of RG stained LM cells, pH congruent to 7, is purple, the cytoplasm blue. After DNA or RNA digestion the purple respectively blue coloration in the nucleus or the cytoplasm completely disappeares. Therefore DNA and RNA are the preferentially stained biological substrates. In the spectrum of RG stained nuclei, pH congruent to 7, three absorption bands are distinguishable: They are A1 (15400 cm-1, 649 nm), A2 (16800 cm-1, 595 nm) the absorption bands of DNA-bound monomers and dimers of azure B and RB (18100 cm-1, 552 nm) the distinct intense Romanowsky band. Our extensive experimental material shows clearly that RB is produced by a complex of DNA, higher polymers of azure B (degree of association p greater than 2) and eosin Y. The complex is primarily held together by electrostatic interaction: inding of polymer azure B cations to the polyanion DNA generates positively charged binding sites in the DNA-azure B complex which are subsequently occupied by eosin Y anions. It can be spectroscopically shown that the electronic states of the azure B polymers and the attached eosin Y interact. By this interaction the absorption of eosin Y is red shifted and of the azure B polymers blue shifted. The absorption bands of both molecular species overlap and generate the Romanowsky band. Its strong maximum at 18100 cm-1 is due to the eosin Y part of the DNA-azure B-eosin Y complex. The discussed red shift of the eosin Y absorption is the main reason for the purple coloration of RG stained nuclei. Using a special technique it was possible to prepare an artificial DNA-azure B-eosin Y complex with calf thymus DNA as a model nucleic acid and the two dye stuffs azure B and eosin Y.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The binding of azur B to chondroitin sulfate (CHS) was investigated using absorption spectroscopy. In aqueous solutions it is possible to distinguish three different dye species with absorption bands at 646, 597, and 555 nm. They are assigned to monomers, dimers, and higher aggregates of azure B, which become bound to CHS as the dye concentration (CD) increases. The short-wavelength band (555 nm) causes metachromasia in stained histological materials. When saturation occurs, the metachromatic azure B-CHS complex has a 1:1 composition, i.e., each anionic SO-4 and COO(-)-binding site of CHS binds one dye cation. The composition of the saturated metachromatic complex was determined by spectrophotometric and conductometric titration of CHS with azure B, while the SO-4 and COO- content of CHS was determined by conductometric titration of CHS-acid with NaOH. The binding isotherm of azure B to CHS was determined using gelpermeation chromatography. The isotherm can be described by the model of cooperative binding of ligands to linear biopolymers. We found good agreement between theoretical predictions and experimental findings in the range of 0 less than r less than 0.8 (r = the fraction of occupied binding sites). Using a Schwarz plot, we determined the binding constants of nucleation (Kn = 2.5 X 10(3) M-1) and aggregation (Kq = 1.2 X 10(5) M-1), as well as the cooperativity parameter (q = 50), T = 295 K. With increasing CD, the strong cooperativity of the dye binding favors the formation of metachromatic aggregates rather than monomers and dimers. From the temperature dependence of Kq we evaluated the standard binding enthalpy (delta Hoq = -20.0 kJ mol-1) and entropy (delta Soq = 29.7 JK-1 mol-1) of the cooperative dye binding. The binding was found to be strongly exothermic and accompanied by a thermodynamically favorable entropy increase, this being typical of hydrophobic interactions. Solid azure B-CHS complexes were prepared according to a special dialytic technique and were studied using a microspectrophotometer equipped with a polarizer and an analyzer. The metachromatic 1:1 complex has a broad, intense absorption band whose main peak occurs at 560 nm. This corresponds with the maximum of the metachromatic dye complex in aqueous solution, i.e. 555 nm. The CHS chains of the azure B-CHS complex can be mechanically aligned in a preferred direction (k). We were able to prepare excellently orientated and very fine dye-CHS films which were birefringent and dichroic - the more birefringent, the better the mechanical orientation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The interaction between a novel aromatic thiolato derivative from the family of DNA-intercalating platinum complexes, phenylthiolato-(2,2',2"-terpyridine)platinum(II)-[PhS(ter py)Pt+], and nucleic acids was studied by using viscosity, equilibrium-dialysis and kinetic measurements. Viscosity measurements with sonicated DNA provide direct evidence for intercalation, and show that at binding ratios below 0.2 molecules per base-pair PhS(terpy)Pt+ causes an increase in contour length of 0.2 nm per bound molecule. However, helix extension diminishes at greater extents of binding, indicating the existence of additional, non-intercalated, externally bound forms of the ligand. The ability of PhS(terpy)Pt+ to aggregate in neutral aqueous buffers at a range of ionic strengths and temperatures was assessed by using optical-absorption methods. Scatchard plots for binding to calf thymus DNA at ionic strength 0.01 (corrected for dimerization) are curvilinear, concave upward, providing further evidence for two modes of binding. The association constant decreases at higher ionic strengths, in accord with the expectations of polyelectrolyte theory, although the number of cations released per bound unipositive ligand molecule is substantially greater than 1. Stopped-flow kinetic measurements confirm the complexity of the binding reaction by revealing multiple bound forms of the ligand whose kinetic processes are both fast and closely coupled. Thermal denaturation of DNA radically alters the shapes of binding isotherms and either has little effect on, or enhances, the affinity of potential binding sites, depending on experimental conditions. Scatchard plots for binding to natural DNA species with differing nucleotide composition show that the ligand has a requirement for a single G X C base-pair at the highest-affinity intercalation sites.  相似文献   

5.
DNA-protein binding in interphase chromosomes   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The metachromatic dye, azure B, was analyzed by microspectrophotometry when bound to DNA fibers and DNA in nuclei with condensed and dispersed chromatin. The interaction of DNA and protein was inferred from the amount of metachromasy (increased β/α-peak) of azure B that resulted after specific removal of various protein fractions. Dye bound to DNA-histone fibers and frog liver nuclei fixed by freeze-methanol substitution shows orthochromatic, blue-green staining under specific staining conditions, while metachromasy (blue or purple color) results from staining DNA fibers without histone or tissue nuclei after protein removal. The dispersed chromatin of hepatocytes was compared to the condensed chromatin of erythrocytes to see whether there were differences in DNA-protein binding in "active" and "inactive" nuclei. Extraction of histones with 0.02 N HCl, acidified alcohol, perchloric acid, and trypsin digestion all resulted in increased dye binding. The amount of metachromasy varied, however; removal of "lysine-rich" histone (extractable with 0.02 N HCl) caused a blue color, and a purplish-red color (µ-peak absorption) resulted from prolonged trypsin digestion. In all cases, the condensed and the dispersed chromatin behaved in the same way, indicating the similarity of protein bound to DNA in condensed and dispersed chromatin. The results appear to indicate that "lysine-rich" histone is bound to adjacent anionic sites of a DNA molecule and that nonhistone protein is located between adjacent DNA molecules in both condensed and dispersed chromatin.  相似文献   

6.
The present studies prove that the thiazin dyes, azure B, azure C and thionin, and the quinolin dyes pinacyanol and its hydrochloride, are suitable for topo-optical staining of the plasmalemma. On the membrane surface the orientated bound dye molecules become stabilized, and with subsequent precipitation the anisotropic effect is reinforced. On optical analysis, the thiazin dye molecules (azure B, AZURE C and Thionin) are bound radially on the membrane. The molecules of the previously studied quinolin dye, N,N'-diethylpseudoisocyanide chloride are bound parallel to the membrane, while pinacyanol and its hydrochloride, like the thiazin dyes, are bound in the radial position.  相似文献   

7.
A variation of the quantitative affinity chromatography (QAC) method of Winzor, Chaiken, and co-workers for the analysis of protein-ligand interactions has been developed and used to characterize sequence-specific and nonspecific protein-heparin interactions relevant to blood coagulation. The method allows quantitation of the binding of two components, A and B, from the competitive effect of one component, B, on the partitioning of the other component, A, between an immobilized acceptor phase and solution phase at equilibrium. Under the conditions employed, the differences in total A concentrations yielding an equivalent degree of saturation of the immobilized acceptor in the absence and presence of B defines the concentration of A bound to B in solution, thereby enabling conventional Scatchard or nonlinear least-squares analysis of the A-B equilibrium interaction. Like the QAC method, quantitation of the competitor interaction does not depend on the nature of the affinity matrix interaction, which need only be described empirically. The additional advantage of the difference method is that only the total rather than the free competitor ligand concentration need be known. The method requires that the partitioning component A be univalent, but allows for multivalency in the competitor, B, and can in principle be used to study binding interactions involving nonidentical, interacting, or nonspecific overlapping sites. Both the binding constant and the stoichiometry for the specific antithrombin-heparin interaction as well as the apparent binding constant for the nonspecific thrombin-heparin interaction at low thrombin binding densities obtained using this technique were in excellent agreement with values determined using spectroscopic probes.  相似文献   

8.
HOP1 protein, present in sporulating cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and believed to be a component of the synaptonemal complex, has been expressed in Escherichia coli fused to a biotinylated tag protein. Once solubilized from bacterial inclusion bodies, the HOP1 fusion protein was purified by using a combination of avidin-affinity chromatography and gel filtration FPLC and refolded. Sequence comparisons indicate that the HOP1 gene product contains a zinc finger motif, which may confer DNA binding properties, and the recombinant polypeptide was used to assess the putative DNA binding properties of the product of native HOP1 protein using a gel-shift assay. Protein and protein-DNA complexes were detected by exploiting the affinity of streptavidin-alkaline phosphatase for the biotinylated tag protein after Western blotting. The HOP1 fusion protein bound unambiguously to digested genomic yeast DNA. This binding possessed some degree of specificity, was maintained under a wide range of salt concentrations, and was unaffected by the presence of high concentrations of competitor DNA (synthetic poly[dI-dC].poly[dI-dC]). In contrast, no shift was detected when the fusion protein was incubated with digested genomic DNA from Arabidopsis, or with lambda/HindIII DNA. Incubation with digested genomic DNA from Lilium produced a small change in the mobility of the protein. The biotinylated tag protein failed to show any DNA binding activity. Scatchard analysis indicated an apparent yeast genomic DNA:HOP1 fusion protein dissociation constant of K(d) = 5 x 10(-7) M.  相似文献   

9.
Two components of Giemsa are necessary to obtain Giemsa-11 banding. These are an azure (either azure A or B) and eosin Y. The conditions under which azure and eosin interact to differentiate 9qh and other magenta-colored regions involve: (1) the absolute concentrations and ratio of the two dyes; (2) the pH and, to a lesser extent (3) the buffer composition of the staining solution. Differentiation is accompanied by the presence of magenta-colored precipitate, the formation of which is altered by any of the above-mentioned conditions. The absorption spectra of magentacolored and adjacent pale blue regions, measured in situ, show a significant change from those of dye mixtures and dye components in solution. These changes suggest the formation of an azure-eosinate complex. At neutral pH, differentiation of magenta-colored regions is not successful under conditions which denature DNA; e.g. (1) high temperatures; or (2) incubation in formamide. At alkaline pH (11.6), neither moderately high temperature nor fixation of chromosomes with formalin appears to affect Giemsa-11 banding. Thus, differential denaturation of DNA does not appear to play a key role.  相似文献   

10.
The interactions of methylene blue, azure B, and thionine with calf thymus DNA, [poly (dG-dC)]2, [poly(dA-dT)]2, and the constituent mononucleotides 2′-deoxyguanosine-5′-monophosphate(dGMP), 2′-deoxyadenosine-5′-monophosphate(dAMP), 2′-deoxycytidine-5′-monophosphate(dCMP), and thymidine-5′-monophosphate(dTMP) have been studied by steady-state absorption spectroscopy and with equilibrium dialysis. Scatchard plots for binding of the dyes to the nucleic acid polymers were convex downward at low binding ratios, characteristic of intercalation, and binding constants for this mode were calculated under conditions of varying ionic strength. For each of the dyes, binding constants with [poly(dG-dC)]2 and [poly(dA-dT)]2 were of the same order of magnitude, so that previously reported (G-C) preferentially is not very marked. At high binding ratios, the Scatchard plots did not return to the abscissa but curved upward, indicative of a weaker cooperative binding mode, occurring under conditions where the dye is in excess, which is suggested to be external stacking of the dye molecules promoted by the polyanion. The dependence of the absorption spectra on added salt demonstrated a shift in the strong binding mode for the three dyes with [poly(dA-dT)]2 with increasing ionic strength, while with [poly(dG-dC)]2 this does not occur. The dyes were found to bind to purine but not pyrimidine mononucleotides with dGMP and dAMP, 1:1 complexes were formed initially and also 1:2 dye/nucleotide complexes with increasing nucleotide concentrations. Under low salt conditions, binding to dAMP was slightly stronger than to dGMP for the three dyes studied, while at high ionic strength, when the binding constants are significantly lower, all binding constants become very similar. Binding to mononucleotides is suggested to be primarily stabilised by π-π stacking interactions between the planar dyes and the nucleobases: for thionine and azure B there also appears to be H-bonds between the exocyclic amines and the sugar–phosphates conferring extra stability. Neither increasing the number of phosphate groups on the nucleotides nor changing from deoxyribose to ribose sugars had any significant effect on the binding constants. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of gamma-rays on the binding of proflavine and acridine orange to DNA was investigated by spectrophotometry. The effect of irradiation was observed on the buffered solutions of the free dye and free DNA. A dose of about 35 krad caused a hyperchromicity of 30-40 per cent to the DNA peak at 258 nm, while the same dose introduced a hypochromic effect to the monomer peaks of the dyes by 30 per cent. This implied that gamma-rays have an effect of decreasing the monomer concentration of free-day molecules in solution. From the results, we conclude that more dye is bound to the changed conformation of dye-bound DNA on irradiation. Scratchard-binding isotherms drawn for the unirradiated and irradiated complexes of Pf-DNA showed interesting differences. Similar isotherms could not be obtained for the acridine orange-DNA system.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The method of DNA binding to nitrocellulose filters was applied to DNA isolated from mouse liver and Ehrlich ascite carcinoma (EAC), calf thymus, and lymphocytes from patients with chronic lymphoid leukemia. In those and phage PM2 DNA the increase in the DNA binding to the filters with a rise in NaCl concentration from 0.5 up to 4.5 M was sigmoidal being suggestive of a conformational transition. No such activity was found in the case of phage lambda or single-stranded DNA. The binding decreased dramatically after mild cleavage of DNA with DNAase I or treatment with phospholipase C or Eco RI and Hin PI restrictases. Incubation of DNA with ethidium bromide led to decrease in the amount of bound DNA. This effect was enhanced with a rise in the dye concentration. The isotherms of ethidium bromide binding to eukaryotic DNA obtained in Scatchard plots by optic titration had a component with a positive slope at low values of r. Bivalent ions (Mg2+, Zn2+) shifting the equilibrium towards the Z-form increased the proportion of macromolecules retained on the filters at NaCl concentrations of 1-3 M. Local changes in the helix conformation were studied with the help of chemical probes: diethylpyrocarbonate (guanine Z-DNA) and osmium-pyridine reagent (pyrimidines of boundary B-Z sites). These probes incorporation into samples of liver DNA, EAC, and lymphocytes resulted in chemical modification of all these samples. Modification of DNA by osmium-pyridine reagent led to inhibition of subsequent restriction by Eco RI restrictase. The data obtained are suggestive of the presence of Z-regions in the B-helix of eukaryotic DNA. A topological model of Z-site stabilization in small superhelical loops of DNA fixed by protein or lipoprotein molecules is proposed.  相似文献   

14.
Thallium (Tl) binds to the major and minor grooves of B-DNA in the solid state (Howerton et al., Biochemistry 40, 10023-10031, 2001). The aim of this study was to examine the binding of Tl(I) cation with calf-thymus DNA in aqueous solution at physiological pH, using constant concentration of DNA (12.5 mM) and various concentrations of metal ions (0.5 to 20 mM). UV-visible and FTIR spectroscopic methods were used to determine the cation binding site, the binding constant and DNA structural variations in aqueous solution. Direct Tl bindings to guanine and thymine were evident by major spectral changes of DNA bases with overall binding constant of K = 1.40 x 10(4) M(-1) and little perturbations of the backbone phosphate group. Both major and minor groove bindings were observed with no alteration of the B-DNA conformation. At low metal concentration (0.5 mM), the number of cations bound were 10 per 1000 nucleotides, while at higher cation concentration (10 mM), this increased to 30 cations per 1000 nucleotides.  相似文献   

15.
Azure B is the most important Romanowsky dye. In combination with eosin Y it produces the well known Romanowsky-Giemsa staining pattern on the cell. Usually commercial azure B is strongly contaminated. We prepared a sample of azure B-BF4 which was analytically pure and had no coloured impurities. The substance was used to redetermine the molar extinction coefficient epsilon (v)M of monomeric azur B in alcoholic solution. In the maximum of the long wavelength absorption at v = 15.61 kK (lambda = 641 nm) the absorptivity is epsilon (15.61)M = (9.40 +/- 0.15) x 10(4)M-1 cm-1. This extinction coefficient may be used for standardization of dye samples. In aqeuous solution azur B forms dimers and even higher polymers with increasing concentration. The dissociation constant of the dimers, K = 2,2 x 10(-4)M (293 K), and the absorption spectra of pure monomers and dimers in water have been calculated from the concentration dependence of the spectra using an iterative procedure. The molar extinction coefficient of the monomers at 15.47 kK (646 nm) is epsilon (15.47)M = 7.4 x 10(4)M-1 cm-1. The dimers have two long wavelength absorption bands at 14.60 and 16.80 kK (685 and 595 nm) with very different intensities 2 x 10(4) and 13.5 x 10(4)M-1 cm-1. The spectrum of the dimers in aqueous solution is in agreement with theoretical considerations of F?rster (1946) and Levinson et al. (1957). It agrees with an antiparallel orientation of the molecules in the dimers. It may be that dimers bound to a substrate in the cell have another geometry than dimers in solution. In this case the weak long wavelength absorption of the dimers can increase.  相似文献   

16.
The performances of two standardized Romanowsky stains (azure B/eosin and azure B/methylene blue/eosin) have been compared with each other and with a methylene blue/eosin stain. Visible-light absorbance spectra of various hematological substrates have been measured. These have been analyzed in terms of the quantities of bound azure B, methylene blue and eosin dimers and monomers, and in terms of the CIE color coordinates. It has been found that the addition of methylene blue to azure B/eosin produces little change in performance, at least using these two analytical methods. Methylene blue/eosin does not produce the purplish colorations typical of the Romanowsky effect. This is due not to differences between the spectra of methylene blue and azure B, but to the fact that methylene blue does not facilitate the binding of eosin to cellular substrates to the same extent as azure B.  相似文献   

17.
Methods probing protein–DNA associations include direct binding titrations and competition binding experiments. For the latter, we present here a simple procedure allowing the quantitative evaluation of dissociation constants. We show that the ratio between the fraction of a DNA probe bound to protein in the absence of competitor and that in the presence of competitor is, at large competitor concentrations, a linear function of the competitor concentration, and we derive equations allowing the dissociation constant for the protein–competitor complex to be evaluated from the slope. We show further that a self-competition experiment, where the DNA probe and competitor are chemically the same species, can be used as a complement to a direct titration to determine the fraction of protein that is correctly folded for specific DNA binding. Thus, such a combination of direct and self-competition titration can be used as a check of the conformational purity of DNA binding proteins.  相似文献   

18.
The performances of two standardized Romanowsky stains (azure B/eosin and azure B/methylene blue/eosin) have been compared with each other and with a methylene blue/eosin stain. Visible-light absorbance spectra of various hematological substrates have been measured. These have been analyzed in terms of the quantities of bound azure B, methylene blue and eosin dimers and monomers, and in terms of the CIE color coordinates. It has been found that the addition of methylene blue to azure B/eosin produces little change in performance, at least using these two analytical methods. Methylene blue/eosin does not produce the purplish colorations typical of the Romanowsky effect. This is due not to differences between the spectra of methylene blue and azure B, but to the fact that methylene blue does not facilitate the binding of eosin to cellular substrates to the same extent as azure B.  相似文献   

19.
Equilibrium binding is believed to play an important role in directing the subsequent covalent attachment of many carcinogens to DNA. We have utilized UV spectroscopy to examine the non-covalent interactions of aflatoxin B1 and B2 with calf thymus DNA, poly(dAdT):poly(dAdT), and poly(dGdC):poly(dGdC), and have utilized NMR spectroscopy to examine non-covalent interactions of aflatoxin B2 with the oligodeoxynucleotide d(ATGCAT)2. UV-VIS binding isotherms suggest a greater binding affinity for calf thymus DNA and poly(dAdT):poly(dAdT) than for poly(dGdC):poly(dGdC). Scatchard analysis of aflatoxin B1 binding to calf thymus DNA in 0.1 M NaCl buffer indicates that binding of the carcinogen at levels of bound aflatoxin less than 1 carcinogen per 200 base pairs occurs with positive cooperativity. The cooperative binding effect is dependent on the ionic strength of the medium; when the NaCl concentration is reduced to 0.01 M, positive cooperativity is observed at carcinogen levels less than 1 carcinogen per 500 base pairs. The Scatchard data may be fit using a "two-site" binding model [L.S. Rosenberg, M.J. Carvlin, and T.R. Krugh, Biochemistry 25, 1002-1008 (1986)]. This model assumes two independent sets of binding sites on the DNA lattice, one a high affinity site which binds the carcinogen with positive cooperativity, the second consisting of lower affinity binding sites to which non-specific binding occurs. NMR analysis of aflatoxin B2 binding to d(ATGCAT)2 indicates that the aflatoxin B2/oligodeoxynucleotide complex is in fast exchange on the NMR time scale. Upfield chemical shifts of 0.1-0.5 ppm are observed for the aflatoxin B2 4-OCH3, H5, and H6a protons. Much smaller chemical shift changes (less than or equal to 0.06 ppm) are observed for the oligodeoxynucleotide protons. The greatest effect for the oligodeoxynucleotide protons is observed for the adenine H2 protons, located in the minor groove. Nonselective T1 experiments demonstrate a 15-25% decrease in the relaxation time for the adenine H2 protons when aflatoxin B2 is added to the solution. This result suggests that aflatoxin B2 protons in the bound state may be in close proximity to these protons, providing a source of dipolar relaxation. Further experiments are in progress to probe the nature of the aflatoxin B1 and B2 complexes with polymeric DNA and oligodeoxynucleotides, and to establish the relationship between the non-covalent DNA-carcinogen complexes observed in these experiments, and covalent aflatoxin B1-guanine N7 DNA adducts.  相似文献   

20.
A thorough understanding of the mechanisms of R-, C-and G-banding will come only from studies of the binding of Giemsa dyes to isolated and characterized preparations of heterochromatin and euchromatin. Since such studies require an exact knowledge of the optical characteristics of Giemsa, the spectral adsorption curves and extinction coefficients of Giemsa and its component dyes at various concentrations in the presence and absence of DNA were determined. — Although Giemsa is a complex mixture of thiazin dyes plus eosin; methylene blue, and azure A, B or C alone gave good banding. Thionin, with no methyl groups, gave poor or no banding. Eosin was not a necessary component for banding. — The most striking characteristic of the thiazin dyes is that they are strongly metachromatic, i.e., their adsorption spectra and extinction coefficients change as the concentration of the dye increases or as they bind to positively charged compounds (chromotropes). These changes, especially for methylene blue, are described in detail and allow a distinction between concentration dependent binding to DNA by intercalation and binding by side stacking.  相似文献   

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