Embryonic chick DNA from different tissues was examined for differences which might indicate specific DNA amplification in somatic cells. The problem was approached by determining t h e DNA compositional heterogeneity and searching for possible variation in different tissues of the 12day chick. Neur
Repetitive DNA in differntiating chick tissues
β Scribed by Kathleen Nelson Ayres
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1010 KB
- Volume
- 93
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Embryonic chick DNA from different tissues was examined for diferences in relative content of highly repetitive DNA which might indicate specific DNA amplification in somatic cells. The content of repetitive sequences in DNA isolated from cerebrum, muscle, and neural retina tissues, at the same and at different embryonic stages, was determined by hydroxyapatite fractionation of partially reassociated DNA samples. An unrenatured marker DNA (C^14^βlabeled E. coli DNA) was added to each chick DNA sample in order to monitor the nonspecific singleβstranded DNA retention by each hydroxyapatite column. When chick DNA samples were sheared to a doubleβstranded length of 1,300 nucleotide pairs, an average of 20.2% Β± 2.2% of the DNA was found to reassociate at a Cot value of 10. The quantity of the fast reassociating sequences was found to constitute the same fraction of the DNA in all the tissues studied. In addition, all the reassociated DNA samples exhibited the same CsCl density classes. The studies also indicated that most chick DNA repetitive sequences are interspersed with nonrepetitive sequences.
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