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Original Articles

Zonal Fractionation of Mammalian Metaphase Chromosomes and Determination of Their DNA Content

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Pages 157-182 | Published online: 05 Dec 2006
 

Abstract

Chinese hamster cells in culture were synchronized, collected at metaphase, homogenized to release the chromosomes, and the chromosomes fractionated in a sucrose gradient using a zonal centrifuge with an A12 zonal rotor. Chromosomes in the separated fractions as well as in control metaphase spreads were quantitatively classified into five easily distinguished groups, according to individual measurements of length and centromeric index. For each zonal fraction, chemical determinations were made of the amount of DNA per average chromosome. Using the group compositional data for each fraction, the amount of DNA per average chromosome in each of the groups was then calculated to be: Group I (chromosomes 1, 2)= 1.00 ± 0.14 pgm/chromatid; Group II (chromosomes 4, X, 5) -0.39 ± 0.05 pgm/chromatid; Group III (chromosomes Y, 6, 7, 8)=0.24 ± 0.04 pgm/chromatid; Group IV (chromosomes 9, 10, 11)=0.13 ± 0.004 pgm/ chromatid; and Group V (a small marker in this cell line)=0.06 pgm/ chromatid. These values are in good agreement with the literature values for relative chromosomal DNA content derived from cytospectrophotometric measurements of fuelgen stained hamster metaphase spreads. They indicate that unlike the case for human chromatids the amount of DNA found in hamster chromatids is not directly proportional to the chromatid length.

The larger chromosomes contain more DNA per unit length than smaller chromosomes. The magnitude of this effect is considerably greater than that which may be ascribable to centromeric constriction.

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