Mutation at autosomal loci of Chinese hamster ovary cells: involvement of a high-frequency event silencing two linked alleles.
Open Access
- 1 July 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 3 (7) , 1172-1181
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.3.7.1172
Abstract
Two classes of cell lines heterozygous at the galactokinase (glk) locus have been isolated from Chinese hamster ovary cells. Class I, selected by plating nonmutagenized wild-type cells at low density in medium containing 2-deoxygalactose at a partially selective concentration, underwent subsequent mutation to the glk-/- genotype at a low frequency (approximately 10(-6) per cell), which was increased by mutagenesis. Class II heterozygotes, isolated by sib selection from mutagenized wild-type cells, had a higher spontaneous frequency of mutation to the homozygous state (approximately 10(-4) per cell), which was not affected by mutagenesis. About half of the glk-/- mutants derived from a class II heterozygote, but not the heterozygote itself, were functionally hemizygous at the syntenic thymidine kinase (tk) locus. Similarly, a tk+/- heterozygote with characteristics analogous to the class II glk+/- cell lines underwent high-frequency mutation to tk-/-, and most of these mutants, but not the tk+/- heterozygote, were functionally hemizygous at the glk locus. A model is proposed, similar to that for the mutational events at the adenine phosphoribosyl transferase locus (W. E. C. Bradley and D. Letovanec, Somatic Cell Genet. 8:51-66, 1982), of two different events, high and low frequency, being responsible for mutation at either of the linked loci tk and glk. The low-frequency event may be a point mutation, but the high-frequency event, in many instances, involves coordinated inactivation of a portion of a chromosome carrying the two linked alleles. Class II heterozygotes would be generated as a result of a low-frequency event at one allele, and class I heterozygotes would be generated by a high-frequency event. Supporting this model was the demonstration that all class I glk+/- lines examined were functionally hemizygous at tk.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Induction of thymidine kinase in enzyme-deficient chinese hamster cellsCell, 1982
- Gene amplification and gene correction in somatic cellsCell, 1982
- 5-Azacytidine-Induced Reactivation of a Herpes Simplex Thymidine Kinase GeneScience, 1982
- Reactivation of an Inactive Human X Chromosome: Evidence for X Inactivation by DNA MethylationScience, 1981
- Mutagenicity testing in mammalian cellsMutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 1980
- Validation of conditions for efficient detection of HPRT and APRT mutations in suspension-cultured chinese hamster ovary cellsMutation Research/Environmental Mutagenesis and Related Subjects, 1980
- Reversible inactivation of autosomal alleles in chinese hamster cellsJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1979
- Inverse relationship between galactokinase activity and 2-deoxygalactose resistance in Chinese hamster ovary cellsSomatic Cell and Molecular Genetics, 1978
- On the nature of hereditable variation in cultured somatic cellsCell, 1976
- Mutants of cultured chinese hamster cells deficient in adenine phosphoribosyl transferaseCell, 1974