Abstract: | From a variety of independent Chinese hamster cell lines, stable variants resistant to 5 μg/ml of Ara-C were isolated via a single step selection; in contrast to variants selected at lower drug concentrations, the resistant clones appear to be uniformly deficient in Ara-C phosphorylation, an activity previously shown [14] to be carried out in hamster cells by a cytoplasmic dC-kinase (dC-kinase 2). These dC-kinase deficient (dCK−) variants can be selected against because they are unable to divide in a medium containing dT (0.8 mM) and dC (0.01 mM), which supports the growth of wild type dCK+ cells. Plating of dCK− cells in medium supplemented with both nucleosides yields only rare clones of pseudorevertants which escape the thymidine block through a secondary unknown defect; the growth of these clones can be prevented by further addition of dA to the selective medium. As expected from the complementation pattern for the deficient enzyme activities, hybrids between a dCK− hamster line and TK− lines of either mouse or hamster could be isolated in a modified HAT medium (HAT50dC) containing dC and an increased dT concentration. In principle, the same selection can be used to isolate interspecific and intraspecific hybrids between Ara-C resistant variants obtained from a variety of mammalian species and azaguanine resistant lines deficient in HGPRT. The potential interest of this sytem for genetic mapping is discussed. |