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Article Dans Une Revue Methods in Molecular Biology Année : 2015

Analyzing the dynamics of DNA replication in Mammalian cells using DNA combing

M. Bialic
  • Fonction : Auteur
V. Coulon
  • Fonction : Auteur
M. Drac
  • Fonction : Auteur
T. Gostan
  • Fonction : Auteur

Résumé

How cells duplicate their chromosomes is a key determinant of cell identity and genome stability. DNA replication can initiate from more than 100,000 sites distributed along mammalian chromosomes, yet a given cell uses only a subset of these origins due to inefficient origin activation and regulation by developmental or environmental cues. An impractical consequence of cell-to-cell variations in origin firing is that population-based techniques do not accurately describe how chromosomes are replicated in single cells. DNA combing is a biophysical DNA fiber stretching method which permits visualization of ongoing DNA synthesis along Mb-sized single-DNA molecules purified from cells that were previously pulse-labeled with thymidine analogues. This allows quantitative measurements of several salient features of chromosome replication dynamics, such as fork velocity, fork asymmetry, inter-origin distances, and global instant fork density. In this chapter we describe how to obtain this information from asynchronous cultures of mammalian cells.
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Dates et versions

hal-02187384 , version 1 (17-07-2019)

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Citer

M. Bialic, V. Coulon, M. Drac, T. Gostan, E. Schwob. Analyzing the dynamics of DNA replication in Mammalian cells using DNA combing. Methods in Molecular Biology, 2015, 1300, pp.67--78. ⟨10.1007/978-1-4939-2596-4_4⟩. ⟨hal-02187384⟩
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