Mechanisms of nonhomologous recombination in mammalian cells.
- 1 October 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 5 (10) , 2599-2607
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.5.10.2599
Abstract
The primary mechanism of nonhomologous recombination in transfected DNA involves breakage followed by end joining. To probe the joining step in more detail, linear simian virus 40 genomes with mismatched ends were transfected into cultured monkey cells, and individual viable recombinants were analyzed. The transfected genomes carried mismatched ends as a result of cleavage with two restriction enzymes, the recognition sites of which are located in the intron of the gene encoding the T antigen. Because the T antigen gene was split by this cleavage, the transfected genomes were inert until activated by cell-mediated end joining. Clonal descendants of the original recombinants were isolated from 122 plaques and were grouped into four classes based on the electrophoretic mobility of the junction fragment. The structures of representative junctions were determined by nucleotide sequencing. The spectrum of nonhomologous junctions analyzed here along with a large number of previously reported junctions suggest that there are two mechanisms for the linkage of DNA molecules: (i) direct ligation of ends and (ii) repair synthesis primed by terminal homologies of a few nucleotides. A paired-priming model of nonhomologous recombination is discussed. ImagesThis publication has 65 references indexed in Scilit:
- Site-specific excision of integrated polyoma DNACell, 1984
- An SV40 “enhancer trap” incorporates exogenous enhancers or generates enhancers from its own sequencesCell, 1984
- Translocation of the myc cellular oncogene to the immunoglobulin heavy chain locus in murine plasmacytomas is an imprecise reciprocal exchangeCell, 1984
- DNA sequence studies of simian virus 40 chromosomal excision and integration in rat cellsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1984
- Immunoglobulin GenesAnnual Review of Immunology, 1983
- Pseudogenes for human small nuclear RNA U3 appear to arise by integration of self-primed reverse transcripts of the RNA into new chromosomal sitesCell, 1983
- An immunoglobulin deletion mutant with implications for the heavy-chain switch and RNA splicingNature, 1980
- Cold-sensitive regulatory mutants of simian virus 40Journal of Molecular Biology, 1980
- Evolutionary variants of simian virus 40: Cellular DNA sequences and sequences at recombinant joints of substituted variantsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1978
- Characterization and sequence analysis of a recombination site in the hybrid virus Ad2+ND1Journal of Molecular Biology, 1978