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1.
Foldback DNA, prepared from mouse and Scilla sibirica main band DNA, and from rye (Secale cereale) total DNA, was characterised by denaturation, renaturation, and electron microscopy. 3H-cRNA of this DNA was hybridised in situ to nuclei and chromosomes of the respective species. There is no universal labelling pattern among the three species. In mouse, highly repetitive foldback DNA is present in the whole chromatin including the satellite DNA-containing regions. In Scilla sibirica, on the contrary, the highly repetitive foldback sequences are excluded form the satellite DNA loci and are arranged in clusters in the remaining chromatin. In rye, there is a clear preferential labelling of the chromocenters in the interphase nuclei as well as metaphase chromosomes, indicating that highly repetitive foldback DNA is preferentially located among other highly repetitive sequences.  相似文献   

2.
With the aim of optimizing in situ hybridization methods, alkaline, acid, and thermal denaturation procedures have been studied for their ability to separate the DNA strands of nuclear DNA and for the DNA losses they induce. Isolated methanol/acetic acid-fixed mouse liver nuclei have been used as a biological object. The results, obtained with acridine orange staining and microfluorometry, show that all denaturations studied lead to almost complete strand separation. Quantitative DNA staining and cytometry indicated that with heat and alkaline denaturation about 40% of the DNA is lost. Acid denaturation led to about 20% DNA loss. For the alkaline denaturation, the DNA retention could be improved to a 20% DNA loss by adding 70% ethanol to the denaturation medium. During hybridization, another 20% DNA loss occurs. When denatured nuclei are brought under annealing conditions, a rapid renaturation of a considerable fraction of the remaining DNA occurs. The extent of renaturation was dependent on the type of denaturation used. For the ethanolic alkaline denaturation, it was estimated to be 35%. Quantitative nonautoradiographic in situ hybridization experiments with acetylaminofluorene-modified mouse satellite DNA showed that alkaline denaturation procedures are superior to the heat and acid denaturation. As proven by acridine orange fluorescence measurements, hybridization conditions can be designed that permit DNA.RNA hybridization under in situ DNA.DNA denaturing conditions. These conditions should be very useful, especially for in situ hybridization with single-stranded RNA probes.  相似文献   

3.
Thermal denaturation of nuclear DNA is studied in situ in individual cells or isolated cell nuclei by employing the property of the fluorochrome acridine orange (AO) to differentially stain native and denatured DNA and by using an automated flow-through cytofluorimeter for measurement of cell fluorescence. RNAse-treated cells, or cell nuclei, are heated, stained and measured while in suspension and AO-DNA interaction is studied under equilibrium conditions. Measurements are made rapidly (200 cells/sec); subpopulations of cells from a measured sample can be chosen on the basis of differences in their staining or light-scattering properties and analysed separately. DNA denaturation in situ is rapid; it approaches maximum during the first 5 min of cell heating. Divalent cations stabilize DNA against denaturation. At low pH the transition occurs at lower temperature and the width of the transition curves (‘melting profiles’) is increased. Decrease in ionic strength lowers the DNA melting temperature. This effect is much more pronounced in cells pretreated with acids under conditions known to remove histones. Histones thus appear to stabilize DNA in situ by providing counterions. At least four separate phases can be distinguished in melting profiles of DNA in situ; they are believed to indicate different melting points of DNA in complexes with particular histones. A decrease in cell (nuclear) ability to scatter light coincides with DNA melting in situ, possibly representing altered refractive and/or reflective properties of cell nuclei. Formaldehyde, commonly used to prevent DNA renaturation, is not used in the present method. The heat-induced alterations in nuclear chromatin are adequately stabilized after cell cooling in the absence of this agent. Cells heated at 60–85 °C exhibit increased total fluorescence after AO-staining, which is believed to be due to unmasking of new sites on DNA. This increase is neither correlated with DNA melting, nor with the presence of histones. Possibly, it reflects destruction of DNA superstructure maintained at lower temperatures by DNA associations with other than histone macromolecules (nuclear membrane).  相似文献   

4.
The thermodenaturation of chromatin in situ was studied by staining heat-treated nuclei with acridine orange. It was found that formaldehyde, which under the present conditions had to be used to prevent extensive renaturation of DNA, seriously affects the results of standard acridine orange staining in an unspecific manner. In particular the acetylation step involved in this staining method is strongly inhibited. Thus the standard method of staining can only give qualitative information about the effects of thermodenaturation. On the other hand, acridine orange staining at defined equilibrium, without prior acetylation is insensitive to formaldehyde and multiphasic thermodenaturation profiles are obtained with this method. At low temperatures these profiles mainly reflect changes in the protein-DNA interaction whereas at higher temperatures DNA denaturation also contributes to the curves. Although these two processes cannot be separately quantitated by simple measurements of dye binding, the thermodenaturation profiles still contain biologically significant information about the properties of chromatin in situ.  相似文献   

5.
Heat denaturation of DNA in situ, in unbroken cells, was studied in relation to the cell cycle. DNA in metaphase cells denatured at lower temperatures (8 degrees-10 degrees C lower) than DNA in interphase cells. Among interphase cells, small differences between G1, S, and G2 cells were observed at temperatures above 90 degrees C. The difference between metaphase and interphase cells increased after short pretreatment with formaldehyde, decreased when cells were heated in the presence of 1 mM MgCl2, and was abolished by cell pretreatment with 0.5 N HCl. The results suggest that acid-soluble constituents of chromatin confer local stability to DNA and that the degree of stabilization is lower in metaphase chromosomes than in interphase nuclei. These in situ results remain in contrast to the published data showing no difference in DNA denaturation in chromatin isolated from interphase and metaphase cells. It is likely that factors exist which influence the stability of DNA in situ are associated with the super-structural organization of chromatin in intact nuclei and which are lost during chromatin isolation and solubilization. Since DNA denaturation is assayed after cell cooling, there is also a possibility that the extent of denatured DNA may be influenced by some factors that control strand separation and DNA reassociation. The different stainability of interphase vs. metaphase cells, based on the difference in stability of DNA, offers a method for determining mitotic indices by flow cytofluorometry, and a possible new parameter for sorting cells in metaphase.  相似文献   

6.
Denaturation of deoxyribonucleic acid in situ effect of formaldehyde.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In situ denaturation of nuclear deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is studied by use of acridine orange to differentially stain native versus denatured DNA, and a flow-through cytofluorometer for measurements of cell fluorescence. Thermal- or acid-induced DNA denaturation is markedly influenced by formaldehyde. Two mechanisms of the formaldehyde action are distinguished. If cells are exposed to the agent during heating, DNA denaturation is facilitated, most likely by the direct action of formaldehyde as a "passive" denaturing agent on DNA. If cells are pretreated with formaldehyde which is then removed, DNA resistance to denaturation increases, presumably due to chromatin cross-linking. It is believed that both effects occur simultaneously in conventional techniques employing formaldehyde to study DNA in situ, and that the extent of each varies with the temperature and cell type (chromatin condensation). Thus, profiles of DNA denaturation of cells heated with formaldehyde do not represent characteristics of DNA denaturation in situ; DNA denaturation under these conditions is modulated by the reactivity of chromatin components with formaldehyde rather than by DNA interactions with the macromolecules of nuclear mileu.  相似文献   

7.
The data from earlier cytochemical studies, in which the metachromatic fluorochrome acridine orange (AO) was used to differentially stain single vs double-stranded DNA, suggested that DNA in situ in intact metaphase chromosomes or in condensed chromatin of G0 cells is more sensitive to denaturation, induced by heat or acid, than DNA in decondensed chromatin of interphase nuclei. Present studies show that, indeed, DNA in permeabilized metaphase cells, in contrast to cells in interphase, when exposed to buffers of low pH (1.5-2.8) becomes digestible with the single-strand-specific S1 or mung bean nucleases. A variety of extraction procedures and enzymatic treatments provided evidence that the presence of histones, HMG proteins, and S-S bonds in chromatin, as well as phosphorylation or poly(ADP)ribosylation of chromatin proteins, can be excluded as a factor responsible for the differential sensitivity of metaphase vs interphase DNA to denaturation. Cell treatment with NaCl at a concentration of 1.2 N and above abolished the difference between interphase and mitotic cells, rendering DNA in mitotic cells less sensitive to denaturation; such treatment also resulted in decondensation of chromatin visible by microscopy. The present data indicate that structural proteins extractable with greater than or equal to 1.2 N NaCl may be involved in anchoring DNA to the nuclear matrix or chromosome scaffold and may be responsible for maintaining a high degree of chromatin compaction in situ, such as that observed in metaphase chromosomes or in G0 cells. Following dissociation of histones, the high spatial density of the charged DNA polymer may induce topological strain on the double helix, thus decreasing its local stability; this can be detected by metachromatic staining of DNA with AO or digestion with single-strand-specific nucleases.  相似文献   

8.
In this article we describe a novel effect of formamide on DNA of apoptotic nuclei and present a method for specific detection of apoptotic cells based on this effect. Our observations show that formamide induces DNA denaturation in apoptotic nuclei but has no such effect on DNA of non-apoptotic cells. Formamide-induced DNA denaturation combined with detection of denatured DNA with a monoclonal antibody (MAb) against single-stranded DNA made it possible to specifically identify the apoptotic cells. This procedure produced intense staining of the condensed chromatin in the apoptotic nuclei. In contrast, necrotic cells from cultures treated with sodium azide, saponin, or hyperthermia did not bind this antibody, demonstrating the specificity of the formamide-MAb assay for the apoptotic cells. However, TUNEL stained 90-100% of necrotic cells in all three models of necrosis. Because the MAb did not stain cells with single- or double-stranded DNA breaks in the absence of apoptosis, we conclude that staining of the apoptotic nuclei is not influenced by DNA breaks and is induced by specific changes in condensed chromatin, such as damage to the DNA-histone interactions. Importantly, the formamide-MAb technique identified apoptotic cells in frozen sections and in histological sections of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues.  相似文献   

9.
Age related DNA changes in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) leaf nuclei were investigated by Feulgen cytophotometry, thermal denaturation, renaturation, and DNA-DNA hybridization studies during sequential leaf senescence. Cytophotometric Feulgen-DNA comparison measurements between young and senescing nuclei displayed 18% reduction in Feulgen-DNA values, with a corresponding decrease in nuclear area in senescing nuclei. Hydrolysis kinetics indicated that the loss was not due to compactness of the DNA as the curves for older nuclei were consistently lower than curves generated from younger nuclei. DNA loss in senescing nuclei was associated with a decrease in euchromatin or shift from euchromatin to facultative heterochromatin. Purified DNA from young and senescing leaf nuclei did not display different thermal profiles nor did hydroxylapatite chromatography reassociation curves. DNA-DNA hybridization in free solution from young and senescing leaf DNA performed by a Gilford thermo-programmer system indicated that DNA of senescing tobacco nuclei reassociated more slowly than DNA from young nuclei and the mixture of young and senescing leaf DNA displayed intermediate reassociation values. The study indicates that the DNA changes during senescence involve a complex phenomenon which includes the possibility of small single strand nicks undetectable by thermal denaturation, and a loss of small double strand fragments which were detectable only by precise DNA-DNA free solution reassociation and not by hydroxylapatite chromatography reassociation.  相似文献   

10.
FISH (Fluorescence in situ hybridization) is a powerful technique that detects and localises specific DNA sequences on metaphase chromosomes, interphase nuclei or chromatin fibres. When coupled to BrdU (5-Bromo 2-deoxy-uridine) labeling of newly replicated DNA, the replication properties of different DNA sequences can be analysed. However, the technique for the detection of BrdU incorporation is time consuming, and relies on acidic pH buffer treatments, that prevent use of pH sensitive fluorochromes such as FITC (Fluoro-isothiocianate) during FISH. In this work, we describe a simplified protocol that allows the simultaneous detection of FISH signals and BrdU incorporation. Since the technique does not involve paraformaldehyde for cell fixation, or formamide for denaturation of the target DNA and in post-hybridisation washes, it represents a safer alternative to classical FISH techniques.  相似文献   

11.
DNA fiber-FISH staining mechanism.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Fluorescence in situ hybridization to DNA fibers (Fiber-FISH) is a high-resolution, wide-ranging physical DNA mapping method that finds increasing application in the study of pathological gene rearrangements. Here we present experiments designed to understand the nature of the discontinuous FISH signal patterns seen after Fiber-FISH. Use of a novel cisplatin-based chemical labeling method enabled us to produce intact biotin-labeled cosmid target DNA molecules. We monitored by immunofluorescence the fate of such cosmid targets during denaturation and hybridization. The same cosmid DNA labeled with digoxigenin by nick-translation was used to analyze the FISH probe signal distribution in a different color. The probe signals proved to be a subset of the target signals remaining after denaturation and hybridization. We argue that the discontinuity of probe signals in Fiber-FISH is mainly caused by loss of target DNA and limited accessibility due to in situ renaturation and attachment. Furthermore, we conclude that FISH sensitivity is determined by hybridization efficiency and not the ability to generate sufficient signal from small probes. (J Histochem Cytochem 48:743-745, 2000)  相似文献   

12.
Feulgen-DNA microdensitometric and propidium Iodide-DNA (PI-DNA) microfluorometric evaluations were made in Purkinje cells of cerebella from hibernating frogs and from active frogs. Higher Feulgen-DNA/distribution area ratios and lower PI-DNA values were found in the hibernating frog (both at high and low fluorochrome concentrations). These data indicate a higher degree of chromatin compactness. During the activity period, the Feulgen-DNA/distribution area ratios are lower and the Feulgen-DNA content is higher; the corresponding higher PI-DNA values indicate a lower degree of chromatin condensation. Histochemical and ultrastructural data show clearly different distribution patterns of chromatin and ribosomes in the two periods. The overall results underscore lower activity of neurons and a greater homogeneity within the Purkinje cell population during hibernation.  相似文献   

13.
Using multiparameter flow cytometry we have measured the nuclear DNA content of exponentially growing HL-60 cells in conjunction with protein content, nuclear forward light scatter, DNA in situ sensitivity to denaturation, DNA accessibility to 7-aminoactinomycin D (7-AMD), and content of the proliferation-associated proteins: cyclin (PCNA), p105, p34, and Ki-67. Multivariate analysis of the data made it possible to correlate changes in each parameter with the degree of cell advancement through S phase (amount of replicated DNA). A decrease of the protein/DNA ratio, lowered DNA accessibility to 7-AMD, increased sensitivity of DNA to denaturation, and increased ability of isolated nuclei to scatter light all paralleled cell progression through S phase. These changes indicate that during S phase chromatin progressively condenses and suggest that the condensation is associated with the efflux of nonhistone proteins from the nucleus. The increase in the content of the antigen detected by the Ki-67 antibody was observed to exceed the increase in DNA content during S phase and the rate of the Ki-67/DNA increase was higher during the second half of S phase. Thus, this protein appears to be primarily synthesized during S, especially late in S phase, and is degraded in G1. The ratio of cyclin (PCNA)/DNA remained rather constant whereas the contents of p105 and p34 proteins, when expressed per unit of DNA, both decreased during S phase. The data indicate that significant changes in structure and composition of chromatin take place during S phase and suggest that the composition of chromatin associated with the nonreplicated DNA is different compared to chromatin associated with the newly replicated DNA.  相似文献   

14.
Ameloblasts responsible for tooth enamel formation are classified into two different phases: secretion and maturation. At the transition between these secretion and maturation stages, a considerable number of cells die. In this study, we examined the morphology of degenerating ameloblasts by conventional electron microscopy, and DNA cleavage in degenerating ameloblast nuclei by the in situ terminal transferase assay. The results suggest that apoptosis (programmed cell death) in ameloblasts, including DNA ligation is induced at the transitional stage. The nuclear fragments, chromatin condensation and DNA relocation in apoptotic nuclei were examined quantitatively by post-embedding anti-DNA immunogold electron microscopy and the in situ terminal transferase assay combined with electron microscopy. Numerical analysis revealed that immunogold labeling density in the condensed chromatin of apoptotic nuclei was comparable on the average to that in the perinuclear heterochromatin of normal nuclei, and that individual apoptotic nuclear fragments exhibited highly variable gold particle density, from fragments with lower density to that of normal heterochromatin, to fragments with densities twice as high as that of normal heterochromatin. The in situ terminal transferase assay combined with electron microscopy detected DNA ends exposed by ultrathin sectioning as well as DNA cleavage by a putative endonuclease. In conclusion, the state of the DNA, including its ligation and degeneration, changes gradually during chromatin condensation and nuclear fragmentation of apoptosis.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of pristane on the conformation of chromatin in cells isolated from the lymphoid tissues of pristane-treated Copenhagen rats were examined by flow cytometry, thermal denaturation, sensitivity to enzymatic digestion, and histone protein analyses. Decreases were observed in the fluorescent intensities of propidium iodide (PI) stained nuclei isolated from lymphoid cells of pristane-treated rats when compared with normal rat lymphoid nuclei. Studies to address the possible basis for the pristane-induced changes in the DNA staining characteristics of lymphocytes demonstrated that 1) there were no decreases in the amount of DNA present in the nuclei, 2) nuclei isolated from pristane treated rats were less sensitive to thermal denaturation, as well as DNase I enzymatic digestion, and 3) there were apparent increases in the expression of the H1 histone proteins. Collectively, these results suggest that pristane elicits a conformational change in the chromatin which may be mediated by altered expression of nuclear-associated histone proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Physiochemical changes in the state of chromatin shortly following glucocorticoid stimulation of target cells are predicted by the proposed mechanism of steroid action. These changes had not been previously demonstrated in situ. The present experiments demonstrate that in the intact rat, or in one which has been adrenalectomized but given a moderate dose of dexamethasone, the thermal stability of liver cell chromatin is significantly reduced over the level observed in the adrenalectomized untreated animal. This alteration was rated by measuring nuclear acridine orange metachromasia following chromatin denaturation. These data also show an enhanced binding of the dye by the liver cell nuclei under the same conditions. Feulgen dye binding was also found to be enhanced by dexamethasone stimulation but to a level indicative of configurational changes in the chromatin rather than an increase in the amount of DNA in the cells.  相似文献   

17.
DNA isolated from (a) liver chromatin digested in situ with endogenous Ca2+, Mg2+-dependent endonuclease, (b) prostate chromatin digested in situ with micrococcal nuclease or pancreatic DNAase I, and (c) isolated liver chromatin digested with micrococcal nuclease or pancreatic DNAase I has been analyzed electrophoretically on polyacrylamide gels. The electrophoretic patterns of DNA prepared from chromatin digested in situ with either endogenous endonuclease (liver nuclei) or micrococcal nuclease (prostate nuclei) are virtually identical. Each pattern consists of a series of discrete bands representing multiples of the smallest fragment of DNA 200 +/- 20 base pairs in length. The smallest DNA fragment (monomer) accumulates during prolonged digestion of chromatin in situ until it accounts for nearly all of the DNA on the gel; approx. 20% of the DNA of chromatin is rendered acid soluble during this period. Digestion of liver chromatin in situ in the presence of micrococcal nuclease results initially in the reduction of the size of the monomer from 200 to 170 base pairs of DNA and subsequently results in its conversion to as many as eight smaller fragments. The electrophoretic pattern obtained with DNA prepared from micrococcal nuclease digests of isolated liver chromatin is similar, but not identical, to that obtained with liver chromatin in situ. These preparations are more heterogeneous and contain DNA fragments smaller than 200 base pairs in length. These results suggest that not all of the chromatin isolated from liver nuclei retains its native structure. In contrast to endogenous endonuclease and micrococcal nuclease digests of chromatin, pancreatic DNAase I digests of isolated chromatin and of chromatin in situ consist of an extremely heterogeneous population of DNA fragments which migrates as a continuum on gels. A similar electrophoretic pattern is obtained with purified DNA digested by micrococcal nuclease. The presence of spermine (0.15 mM) and spermidine (0.5 mM) in preparative and incubation buffers decreases the rate of digestion of chromatin by endogenous endonuclease in situ approx. 10-fold, without affecting the size of the resulting DNA fragments. The rates of production of the smallest DNA fragments, monomer, dimer, and trimer, are nearly identical when high molecular weight DNA is present in excess, indicating that all of the chromatin multimers are equally susceptible to endogenous endonuclease. These observations points out the effects of various experimental conditions on the digestion of chromatin by nucleases.  相似文献   

18.
We present a detailed thermodynamic investigation of the conformational transitions of chromatin in calf thymus nuclei. Differential scanning calorimetry was used as the leading method, in combination with infrared spectroscopy, electron microscopy, and techniques for the molecular characterization of chromatin components. The conformational transitions were induced by changes in the counterion concentration. In this way, it was possible to discriminate between the interactions responsible for the folding of the higher order structure and for the coiling of nucleosomal DNA. Our experiments confirm that the denaturation of nuclear chromatin at physiological ionic strength occurs at the level of discrete structural domains, the linker and the core particle, and we were able to rule out that the actual denaturation pattern might be determined by dissociation of the nucleohistone complex and successive migration of free histones toward native regions, as recently suggested. The sequence of the denaturation events is (1) the conformational change of the histone complement at 66 degrees C, (2) the unstacking of the linker DNA at 74 degrees C, and (3) the unstacking of the core particle DNA, that can be observed either at 90 or at 107 degrees C, depending on the degree of condensation of chromatin. Nuclear chromatin unfolds in low-salt buffers, and can be refolded by increasing the ionic strength, in accordance with the well-known behavior of short fragments. The process is athermal, therefore showing that the stability of the higher order structure depends on electrostatic interactions. The transition between the folded conformation and the unfolded one proceeds through an intermediate condensation state, revealed by an endotherm at 101 degrees C. The analysis of the thermodynamic parameters of denaturation of the polynucleosomal chain demonstrates that the wrapping of the DNA around the histone octamer involves a large energy change. The most striking observation concerns the linker segment, which melts a few degrees below the peak temperature of naked DNA. This finding is in line with previous thermal denaturation investigations on isolated chromatin at low ionic strength, and suggests that a progressive destabilization of the linker occurs in the course of the salt-induced coiling of DNA in the nucleosome.  相似文献   

19.
Thermal denaturation of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in situ in individual unbroken cells is studied by a cytofluorometric method. This method allows us to investigate DNA denaturation in the presence of divalent cations at concentrations reported to be necessary to maintain native structure of nuclear chromatin. Under these conditions the pattern of DNA denaturation is very different than when studied in the presence of ethylenediaminetetraacetate or citrate. The results suggest that with divalent cations present, the histone basic charges are more uniformly distributed along whole nuclear DNA. Various cell types exhibit great differences in sensitivity to DNA denaturation when assayed in the presence of 1 mM MgCl2. Human lymphocytes, monocytes and certain kinds of human leukemic cells show differences large enough to be used as a parameter for their recognition in mixed samples. Possible applications of the method in basic research on chromatin conformation and as a tool for cell recognition in diagnostic cytology or in the classification of human leukemia are proposed.  相似文献   

20.
DNA in situ is progressively denatured when the cells or nuclei are treated with increasing concentration of acridine orange (AO). This transition can be monitored by flow cytometry as a decrease in green fluorescence. The complexes of denatured DNA and AO undergo immediate condensation and aggregation; this step is manifested by appearance of red luminescence and formation of precipitates that can be detected by electron microscopy. The precipitates form preferentially in heterochromatin as well as in ribosomes and polysomes. Their formation and further aggregation affects cellular light scatter properties in both the forward and right-angle direction. The AO-induced DNA denaturation and condensation was studied in nuclei of Friend erythroleukemia cells from exponentially growing, differentiated or quiescent cells. The DNA in nuclei of quiescent cells, from plateau-phase cultures, was the most sensitive to denaturation; it denatured (measured by changes in luminescence) at an AO concentration between 50 and 80 microM with the midpoint of the transition (Cd) at 70 microM. DNA in nuclei of differentiated cells (dimethyl-sulfoxide-induced erythroid differentiation) was more resistant (Cd = 77-83 microM), whereas DNA in exponentially growing cells was the most resistant (Cd = 86 microM). Extraction of proteins with 0.1 M HCl at 0 degree C abolished the differences between the cells and shifted the transition to a lower AO concentration (Cd = 46 microM). For comparison, the midpoint transitions representing condensation of free, nucleic acids measured as light scatter changes occurred at 13, 22, 31 and 53 microM of AO, for rRNA, tRNA, and denatured and native-calf thymus DNA, respectively. Denaturation and condensation of DNA, which can be induced by AO either in isolated nuclei or viable permeabilized or fixed cells provides a new approach to discriminate cell subpopulations with different chromatin structure by flow cytometry. The molecular mechanisms of this phenomenon are discussed.  相似文献   

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