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Repair of MMS-induced DNA double-strand breaks in haploid cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which requires the presence of a duplicate genome

โœ Scribed by Chlebowicz, E. ;Jachymczyk, W. J.


Publisher
Springer
Year
1979
Tongue
English
Weight
656 KB
Volume
167
Category
Article
ISSN
0026-8925

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โœฆ Synopsis


The formation and repair of double-strand breaks induced in DNA by MMS was studied in haploid wild type and MMS-sensitive rad6 mutant strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with the use of the neutral and alkaline sucrose sedimentation technique. A similar decrease in average molecular weight of double-stranded DNA from 5--6 X 10(8) to 1--0.7 X 10(8) daltons was observed following treatment with 0.5% MMS in wild type and mutant strains. Incubation of cells after MMS treatment in a fresh drug-free growing medium resulted in repair of double-strand breaks in the wild type stain, but only in the exponential phase of growth. No repair of double-strand breaks was found when cells of the wild type strain were synchronized in G-1 phase by treatment with alpha factor, although DNA single-strand breaks were still efficiently repaired. Mutant rad6 which has a very low ability to repair MMS-induced single-strand breaks, did not repair double-strand breaks regardless of the phase of growth. These results suggest that (1) repair of double-strand breaks requires the ability for single-strand breaks repair, (2) rejoining of double-strand breaks requires the availability of two homologous DNA molecules, this strongly supports the recombinational model of DNA repair.


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Repair of gamma-ray induced DNA strand b
โœ Mowat, M. R. A. ;Jachymczyk, W. J. ;Hastings, P. J. ;von Borstel, R. C. ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 1983 ๐Ÿ› Springer ๐ŸŒ English โš– 677 KB

The repair of gamma-ray induced DNA single and double-strand breaks was looked at in wild type and rad18-2 strains of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae using sucrose gradient centrifugation. It was found that rad18-2 diploid cells could repair single and double-strand breaks induced by gamma-rays.