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1.
Cytochemical quantitative methods were used to investigate DNA protein contents of mouse metaphase plates during an alkaline C-banding procedure ( Sumner et al., 1971). Cytochemical stains and reactions for DNA and for total protein content were used to quantitatively assess the sequential involvement (losses) of DNA and protein during the appearance of the classic C-banding pattern which was monitored with Giemsa staining. The data point the preferential loss of DNA from euchromatic regions of chromosomes as the main cause of the C-banding pattern appearance. The effect of chromosomal protein is more likely indirect and perhaps tied to some specific interaction with centromeric DNA that contributes to DNA retention in C-bands. Following the C-banding procedure it was possible to differentially stain the centromeric area with Feulgen and GCA and even with non-fully specific stain for DNA such as methylene blue.  相似文献   

2.
Giemsa dye is a complex mixture containing methylene blue, its oxidation products-azure Ⅰ, Ⅱ, Ⅲ, and their eosinate. The results of our experiments have demonstrated that staining with methylene blue alone can give a faint trace of banding as well as azure Ⅰ, Ⅱ. No bands are obtained with eosin. Nevertheless, good chromosome bandings can be often produced by staining with methylene blue-eosinate or azure Ⅱ-eosinate. These data indicate that eosinate has an important effect for the formation of C-banding on plant chromosomes. In our experiments, the treatments of chromosomes with trypsin or papain have also resulted in good C-banding pattern when slides are stained with Giemsa. We found that the slides untreated with proteinase showed homogeneous intense chromosome staining and, on the contrary, the slides treated with proteinase led to palestaining chromosomes and presenting bandings. It has shown that proteinase, especially trypsin, not only can remove a large amount of chromosomal protein but also can remove DNA and results in C-bandings. Treated properly with trypsin and followed by the Feulgen staining, chromosomes can also produce the C-bandings, but chromosomes treated overtime with trypsin are stained more palely in Feulgen reaction or lead to colourlessness. The above results have further proved that trypsin technique removes large amounts of chromosome DNA and removes less from the C-band regions than from the non-band regions. In this paper we mainly discussed the effects of protein on mechanism of plant chromosome banding. We consider that the production of plant C-banding is probably due to the differential accessibility of nucleoprotein between euehromatin and heteroehromatin regions. It brings about selective removal of nucleoprotein from the chromosome arms. We have compared the effect of trypsin with papain and pepsin on producing bands. Good bands are produced by Giemsa staining chromosomes with trypsin, but no bands are obtained by staining chromosomes treated with pepsin. So the results have expressed that histones are possibly playing more important role in C-bandings.  相似文献   

3.
Slides pretreated for C-banding and stained with DAPI or CMA3 show different banding patterns in human metaphase chromosomes compared to those obtained with either standard Giemsa C-banding or fluorochrome staining alone. Human chromosomes show C-plus DA-DAPI banding after C-banding plus DAPI and enhanced R-banding after C-banding plus Chromomycin A3 staining. If C-banding preferentially removes certain classes of DNA and proteins from different chromosome domains, C-banding pre-treatment may cause a differential DNA extraction from G- and R-bands in human chromosomes, resulting in a preferential extraction of DNA included in G-bands. This hypothesis is partially supported by the selective cleavage and removal of DNA from R-bands of restriction endonuclease HaeIII with C-banding combined with DAPI or Chromomycin A3 staining. Structural factors relating to regional differences in DNA and/or proteins could also explain these results.  相似文献   

4.
Human chromosomes prepared according to routine methods were treated with the restriction endonuclease Alu I followed by staining with Giemsa solution or fluorescent dyes. This procedure results in a C-band-like appearance of the chromosomes due to removal of DNA from euchromatic chromosomal regions. The resistance of heterochromatic regions against cleavage by the enzyme has mainly been interpreted by the absence or rareness of recognition sites for this particular enzyme in these regions. Proteinase K pretreatment followed by a nick translation procedure with Alu I was combined to check this hypothesis. The results show that heterochromatic chromosomal regions can also be labelled. Thus, they are not characterized by a lack of recognition sites. Gradual deproteinisation of chromosomes changes the labelling pattern from a reverse C-banding pattern to a C-band-like appearance. The resistance of heterochromatic chromosomal parts revealed by the technique is mainly due to local chromatin configuration rather than to the underlying DNA sequence itself.  相似文献   

5.
Human chromosomes fixed in methanol-acetic acid have been examined by X-ray microanalysis, before, during and after a G-banding and a C-banding procedure. Phosphorus (representing mainly DNA), sulphur and calcium are the most prominent elements in untreated chromosomes. In the G-banding procedure, the calcium is lost during 2 x SSC treatment. In the C-banding procedure, calcium is lost in the preliminary HCl treatment. During the following barium hydroxide treatment a large amount of barium becomes attached to the chromosomes, but is lost again during the subsequent 2 x SSC treatment. In both banding techniques Giemsa staining produces large peaks for sulphur (thiazine dyes) and bromine (eosin), showing that both types of dyes are involved in the staining. Reduction in the phosphorus peak during these procedures may be partly due to extraction of DNA and other chromosomal components, but could also be due to absorption of phosphorus X-rays by heavy elements (barium and bromine).  相似文献   

6.
Near-ultraviolet irradiation of chromosome preparations mounted in a hydrogen peroxide solution resulted in an oxidative disintegration of the structure of fixed metaphase chromosomes with concomitant production of various band patterns appearing after staining with Giemsa. Neither irradiation nor hydrogen peroxide alone could produce banding. After irradiation in the presence of hydrogen peroxide the gradually increasing effect of oxidation on the chromosomes along the gradient of light intensities from the periphery of the slide towards the radiation focus in the centre of the slide became visible as G-, C-, and N-banding, respectively. Close to the centre only contours of chromosomes were left after this treatment. Although G-banding and differential DNA-extraction often went together, extraction of DNA was not an absolute requirement to obtain a G-band pattern. N-bands appeared to be the chromosomal regions that were most resistant to destruction. Staining methods specific for DNA failed to demonstrate these bands, although with Giemsa an intense staining reaction occurred. On the analogy of the staining behaviour of model protein preparations with Giemsa a phosphoprotein nature is suggested for the N-band material in the chromosomes.  相似文献   

7.
Chromatin organization in the holocentric chromosomes of the green apple aphid Aphis pomi has been investigated at a cytological level after C-banding, NOR, Giemsa, fluorochrome staining and fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). C-banding technique showed that heterochromatic bands are exclusively located on X chromosomes. This data represents a peculiar feature that clearly contradicts the equilocal distribution of heterochromatin typical of monocentric chromosomes. Moreover, silver staining and FISH carried out with a 28S rDNA probe localized rDNA genes on one telomere of each X chromosome; CMA3 staining reveals that these silver positive telomeres are the only GC-rich regions among A. pomi heterochromatin, whereas all other C-positive bands are DAPI positive thus containing AT-rich DNA.  相似文献   

8.
Photo-oxidation of mitotic human chromosomes has been used in conjunction with anti-cytosine and anti-adenosine antibodies to produce R-banding. To elucidate the mechanism of this banding procedure we have examined the effect of photo-oxidation alone on chromosomes and nuclei. With short exposures to light in the presence of dilute methylene blue, C-band areas on chromosomes 1, 9, 16 and the terminal segment of the Y stain poorly. We call this phenomena reverse C-banding. After 18 h of exposure to light the chromosomes are swollen and show very little staining with quinacrine or Giemsa. Quantitative autoradiography shows that their DNA is almost completely extracted. Cytophotometric measurements also confirm that nuclear DNA is progressively extracted according to the length of exposure to light. When chromosomes are exposed to dilute methylene blue alone, without light, G-banded chromosomes result. We suggest the following explanation for these observations. In dilute methylene blue, C-band regions take up the greatest amount of dye and after short periods of photo-oxidation the DNA of these regions is preferentially destroyed resulting in reverse C-banding. Autoradiography in photo-oxidized chromosomes suggested that this preferential destruction of C-segments occurred in our experiments. With more prolonged exposure the DNA of the G-bands regions is preferentially destroyed and staining the remaining DNA with sensitive fluorescent labeled anti-C antibodies results in R-banding.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Fixed chromosomes of human lymphocytes, cultured in the presence of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) during two cell cycles, were exposed to near-ultraviolet irradiation, stained with Giemsa, and after destaining, were subjected to either Coomassie Blue or Feulgen-Schiff staining. A differential reaction of sister chromatids was first revealed by Coomassie Blue staining. Differential staining with Giemsa required a longer irradiation time. This appeared to be reduced after the addition of dithiodipyridine to the cells during their last few hours of culture. The differential pattern obtained after Coomassie Blue staining was the inverse of that obtained after Giemsa staining. From these findings we concluded that the induction of sister chromatid differentiation by light in BrdU-substituted DNA containing chromosomes occurs primarily via chromosomal proteins, presumably by differential breakage of their disulphide bonds. The results of the Feulgen-Schiff staining indicated that differential depurination of BrdU-containing DNA could occur, although only after very prolonged irradiation. A faint though distinctly differential Feulgen-Schiff pattern of sister chromated staining, resulting from differential removal of DNA, was observed after photosensitization by specific DNA-binding dyes. Thus, DNA seems to be affected only under more extreme conditions.  相似文献   

10.
A differential Giemsa staining between sister chromatids was obtained by treating chromosomes replicated twice in medium containing 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) with Hoechst 33258 plus black light at 55 degrees C (HB pretreatment) and deoxyribonuclease (DNase) I, II, or micrococcal nuclease. In this staining pattern the BrdU bifilarly substituted chromatids were darkly and the unifilarly substituted chromatids lightly stained. This staining pattern was obtained only by staining the HB-DNase I-treated chromosomes with Giemsa and methylene blue, not by several other dyes tested. Relatively more DNA labelling was removed from the non-BrdU-substituted than the BrdU-substituted chromosomes, when the HB-pretreated chromosomes were digested with DNase I. But the protein labelling was not removed appreciably in the same treatment. The differential DNase I sensitivity between the non-BrdU-substituted and BrdU-substituted chromosomes disappeared when the HB-pretreated chromosomes were incubated with proteinase K before The DNase I digestion. Moreover, no differential DNase I sensitivity was found between the HB-pretreated isolated DNA containing and not containing BrdU. We propose that during the HB pretreatment, more DNA-protein cross-linkings are induced in BrdU bifilarly substituted than the unifilarly substituted chromatids. This structure protects the chromosomal DNA against the DNase I digestion. Thus, a reverse differential Giemsa staining between sister chromatids is obtained by the HB-DNase I treatment.  相似文献   

11.
Summary We report cytogenetic and molecular studies on a family that carries, in the father, an unusually large chromosome 14p+ variant [WSi-var(14)(p+)] and, in one of his children, a translocation [DSi-der(14)] involving the variant chromosome. Increase in the size of WSi-var(14)(p+) was estimated to be approximately 35% that of a normal chromosome 14. Presence of extra chromosomal material in this variant chromosome was demonstrated by G-banding using trypsin and staining with Leishman, G-banding using bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) and Giemsa, and R-banding using BrdU and Giemsa. This material was positive using C-banding with BaOH and staining with Giemsa and negative in DAPI/distamycin staining, suggesting that it contained repetitive DNA but probably not of the types found in the heterochromatic regions of chromosomes 1, 9, 15, 16, and Y. Staining of the nucleolus organiser region (NOR) with AgNO3 indicated the retention of the NOR in WSi-var(14)(p+) but not in DSi-der(14). In situ hybridisation of metaphase cells with an alpha satellite DNA probe specific for human acrocentric chromosomes demonstrated a significantly increased amount of centromeric alpha sequences in WSi-var(14)(p+). Most or all of the extra alpha sequences were retained in DSi-der(14), indicating translocation near the very distal end of the enlarged region. The extra alpha satellite DNA material may have originated through amplification of some centromeric segments. The possible role of the amplified DNA in chromosomal translocations is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
After treatment with hot NaH2PO4 at pH 9, BUdR-substituted and unsubstituted chromosome regions are palely and intensely stained with Giemsa, respectively; however, after treatment with the same solution at pH 4, the reciprocal staining patterns are produced, i.e. these chromosome regions are intensely and palely stained, respectively. The nature of the mechanisms responsible for this reciprocal differential Giemsa staining of BUdR-substituted and unsubstituted chromosome regions has been investigated by Feulgen staining, electron microscopy, and radioisotope analyses involving scintillation counting and autoradiography. The results indicate that different mechanisms are responsible for the two types of staining effect. The high pH NaH2PO4 treatment preferentially extracts BUdR-substituted DNA into the treatment solution, relative to unsubstituted DNA. The collective evidence from this and other work suggests that BUdR-substituted DNA in the chromosomes is partially photolysed by exposure to daylight during the harvesting procedure, and the degraded DNA is subsequently solubilized and extracted during the high pH treatment. This quantitative reduction of DNA in the BUdR-substituted chromosome regions results in pale Giemsa staining of these regions. The low pH NaH2PO4 treatment does not produce a significant extraction of either BUdR-substituted or unsubstituted DNA into the treatment solution; rather, there may be a redistribution of the unsubstituted DNA relative to the BUdR-substituted DNA such that the unsubstituted DNA is preferentially dispersed outside the boundaries of the chromosomes onto the surrounding area of the slide. It is suggested that the BUdR-substituted chromosome regions stain relatively intensely with Giemsa after the low pH treatment because the DNA in these regions is less dispersed than that in the unsubstituted regions.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The trypsin-Giemsa banding procedure was adapted so that chromosomes could be observed through the microscope during treatment and staining. Trypsin treatment resulted only in a swelling of the chromatids. Chromosome bands which appear as raised structures with interference contrast optics emerged only after staining with Giemsa. These structures remain after Giemsa destaining, suggesting that an irreversable change in chromosome structure is induced by Giemsa.Observations of the stain flow indicate that the positioning of the chromosomes has an effect on the quality of band production. These studies also revealed that bands appear in a reproducible sequence on individual chromosomes, which suggests that alterations take place at different rates along the length of the chromosomes.  相似文献   

14.
The trypsin-Giemsa banding procedure was adapted so that chromosomes could be observed through the microscope during treatment and staining. Trypsin treatment resulted only in a swelling of the chromatids. Chromosome bands which appear as raised structures with interference contrast optics emerged only after staining with Giemsa. These structures remain after Giemsa destaining, suggesting that an irreversable change in chromosome structure is induced by Giemsa. Observations of the stain flow indicate that the positioning of the chromosomes has an effect on the quality of band production. These studies also revealed that bands appear in a reproducible sequence on individual chromosomes, which suggests that alterations take place at different rates along the length of the chromosomes.  相似文献   

15.
Opposite differential staining between sister chromatids was obtained by two silver-staining techniques on chromosomes replicated twice in medium containing 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) and pretreated with Hoechst plus black light. Both silver-nitrate and silver-carbonate staining were affected by chemical extraction and enzyme digestion of chromosomal proteins. Prestaining of silver nitrate or silver carbonate also blocked the fluorescences of protein dyes. However, removal of chromosomal DNA affected the silver-carbonate but not the silver-nitrate staining; the fluorescences of DNA dyes were blocked by the prestaining of silver carbonate but not silver nitrate. Chromosomal protein labelling was released only slightly and its relative amount between BrdU bifilarly substituted and unifilarly substituted chromatids was unchanged during pretreatment of Hoechst plus black light. We speculate that chromosomal non-histones are the targets for silver-nitrate stain, and DNA-non-histone complexes for silver-carbonate stain.  相似文献   

16.
Summary A phenotypically normal male (WSm) was found to have an unusually large short arm of chromosome 14. Increase in the size of this variant chromosome [Wsm-var(14)] was estimated to be approximately 30% that of a normal chromosome 14 by G-banding using trypsin and staining with Leishman. The extra chromosomal material was positive in CBG staining (C-banding using BaOH and staining with Giemsa), suggesting the presence of repetitive DNA. In situ hybridisation using repetitive probes demonstrated this material to be strongly positive for satellite III DNA, and negative for Y-specific heterochromatic DNA. Hybridisation with an alpha DNA probe specific for human acrocentric chromosomes indicated the retention of the centromere, and the absence of alpha DNA in the extra chromosomal material. We propose the origin of the extra chromosomal material in WSm-var(14) to be a result of amplification of contiguous satellite III DNA that is normally present in the short arm of chromosome 14. This variant chromosome does not appear to be associated with the abnormal phenotype in WSm's daughter who is mentally retarded and carries a t(1;?)(q41;?) translocation of chromosome 1.  相似文献   

17.
Treatment of the chromosomes of 25 rodent species with a 50 degrees C hypotonic solution and Giemsa staining permitted identification of the heterochromatic X chromosome in 24 species. With this technique, the facultative of the heterochromatic X chromosome or the facultative portion of large, composite-type X chromosoms is stained darker than the other chromosomes, allowing it to be distinguished from the homologous euchromatic X chromosome in female metaphase cells. Intense staining of the single X chromosome was not observed in male metaphase cells. It is suggested that this differential staining of one of the two X chromosomes might be due to qualitative differences in chromosomal proteins rather than to differences in the degree of chromosomal condensation or in DNA base sequence.  相似文献   

18.
Rainbow trout chromosomes were treated with nine restriction endonucleases, stained with Giemsa, and examined for banding patterns. The enzymes AluI, MboI, HaeIII, HinfI (recognizing four base sequences), and PvuII (recognizing a six base sequence) revealed banding patterns similar to the C-bands produced by treatment with barium hydroxide. The PvuII recognition sequence contains an internal sequence of 4 bp identical to the recognition sequence of AluI. Both enzymes produced centromeric and telomeric banding patterns but the interstitial regions stained less intensely after AluI treatment. After digestion with AluI, silver grains were distributed on chromosomes labeled with [3H]thymidine in a pattern like that seen after AluI-digested chromosomes are stained with Giemsa. Similarly, acridine orange (a dye specific for DNA) stained chromosomes digested with AluI or PvuII in patterns resembling those produced with Giemsa stain. These results support the theory that restriction endonucleases produce bands by cutting the DNA at specific base pairs and the subsequent removal of the fragments results in diminished staining by Giemsa. This technique is simple, reproducible, and in rainbow trout produces a more distinct pattern than that obtained with conventional C-banding methods.  相似文献   

19.
Summary A restriction enzyme-nick translation procedure has been developed for localizing sites of restriction endonuclease action on chromosomes. This method involves digestion of fixed chromosome preparations with a restriction enzyme, nick translation with DNA polymerase I in the presence of biotinylated-dUTP, detection of the incorporated biotin label with streptavidinalkaline phosphatase, and finally staining for alkaline phosphatase. Results obtained on human chromosomes using a wide variety of restriction enzymes are described, and compared with results of Giemsa and Feulgen staining after restriction enzyme digestion. Results of nick translation are not in general the opposite of those obtained with Giemsa staining, as might have been expected. Although the nick translation procedure is believed to give a more accurate picture of the distribution of restriction enzyme recognition sites on chromosomes than Giemsa staining, it is clear that the results of the nick translation experiments are affected by accessibility to the enzymes of the chromosomal DNA, as well as by the extractability of the DNA.  相似文献   

20.
A reliable technique for combined C-banding and silver staining of metaphase chromosomes which uses trypsinization is described. Slides are first immersed in dilute HCl to remove residual cytoplasm from around the chromosomes. They are then treated with saturated barium hydroxide and incubated overnight in saline sodium citrate (0.30 M NaCl, 0.03 M sodium citrate, adjusted to pH 7.0 with HCl). Following the C-banding pretreatment, a two-step method of silver staining which employs a protective colloidal developer is used to stain the nucleolar organizer regions (NORs) of the chromosomes. Silver staining is followed by trypsinization to remove extraneous silver precipitate from the chromosome arms which permits the C-bands to be stained with Giemsa. The method works equally well with fresh and aged mitotic chromosome preparations and gives consistent staining of both heterochromatin and active NORs in metaphases across the slide.  相似文献   

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