Literature DB >> 8065318

Different capacities for recombination in closely related human lymphoblastoid cell lines with different mutational responses to X-irradiation.

F Xia1, S A Amundson, J A Nickoloff, H L Liber.   

Abstract

WIL2-NS and TK6 are two distinct human lymphoblast cell lines derived from a single male donor. WIL2-NS cells are significantly more resistant to the cytotoxic effects of X-irradiation but considerably more sensitive to induced mutation. In an effort to determine the mechanistic basis for these differences, we analyzed the physical structures of thymidine kinase (tk)-deficient mutants isolated after X-ray treatment of tk heterozygotes derived from TK6 and the more mutable WIL2-NS. Southern analysis showed that while 84% of TK6-derived mutants had arisen by loss of heterozygosity (LOH), all 106 mutants from WIL2-NS derivatives arose with LOH at tk and all but one showed LOH at other linked loci on chromosome 17. We adapted a fluorescence in situ hybridization technique to distinguish between LOH due to deletion, which results in retention of only one tk allele, and LOH due to a mechanism involving the homologous chromosome (e.g., recombination), which results in the retention of two alleles. Among the LOH mutants derived that were analyzed in this way, 9 of 26 from WIL2-NS and 11 of 17 from TK6 cell lines arose by deletion. The remaining mutants retained two copies of the tk gene and thus arose by a mechanism involving the homologous allele. Since many of these mutants arising by a homologous mechanism retained partial heterozygosity of chromosome 17, they must have arisen by recombination or gene conversion, and not chromosome loss and reduplication. Finally, the recombinational capacities of WIL2-NS and TK6 were compared in transfection assays with plasmid recombination substrates. Intermolecular recombination frequencies were greater in WIL2-NS than in TK6. These data are consistent with a model suggesting that a recombinational repair system is functioning at a higher level in WIL2-NS than in TK6; the greater mutability of the tk locus in WIL2-NS results from more frequent inter- and intramolecular recombination events.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8065318      PMCID: PMC359111          DOI: 10.1128/mcb.14.9.5850-5857.1994

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cell Biol        ISSN: 0270-7306            Impact factor:   4.272


  82 in total

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Authors:  S A Amundson; H L Liber
Journal:  Mutat Res       Date:  1991-03       Impact factor: 2.433

2.  A Chinese hamster ovary cell line hypersensitive to ionizing radiation and deficient in repair replication.

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Authors:  F L Lin; K M Sperle; N L Sternberg
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4.  Model for homologous recombination during transfer of DNA into mouse L cells: role for DNA ends in the recombination process.

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5.  Effect of insertions, deletions, and double-strand breaks on homologous recombination in mouse L cells.

Authors:  D A Brenner; A C Smigocki; R D Camerini-Otero
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7.  A 24-base-pair DNA sequence from the MAT locus stimulates intergenic recombination in yeast.

Authors:  J A Nickoloff; E Y Chen; F Heffron
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8.  Different cytotoxic and mutagenic responses induced by X-rays in two human lymphoblastoid cell lines derived from a single donor.

Authors:  S A Amundson; F Xia; K Wolfson; H L Liber
Journal:  Mutat Res       Date:  1993-04       Impact factor: 2.433

9.  Biochemistry of DNA lesions.

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10.  Involvement of double-strand chromosomal breaks for mating-type switching in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Authors:  A J Klar; J N Strathern; J A Abraham
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  18 in total

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7.  Clonal analysis of delayed karyotypic abnormalities and gene mutations in radiation-induced genetic instability.

Authors:  A J Grosovsky; K K Parks; C R Giver; S L Nelson
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8.  Illegitimate recombination leading to allelic loss and unbalanced translocation in p53-mutated human lymphoblastoid cells.

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9.  Nitric oxide-induced genotoxicity, mitochondrial damage, and apoptosis in human lymphoblastoid cells expressing wild-type and mutant p53.

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10.  In vivo assay of p53 function in homologous recombination between simian virus 40 chromosomes.

Authors:  L Wiesmüller; J Cammenga; W W Deppert
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