Search
Filter Results
- Resource Type
- Article1
- Book1
- Book Digital1
- Article Type
- Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.1
- Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.1
- Result From
- Lane Catalog1
- PubMed1
-
Year
- Journal Title
- Mutat Res1
Search Results
Sort by
- BookGregory Kennedy, Ankush Gosain, Melina Kibbe, Scott A. LeMaire, editors.Summary: Combining breadth of coverage with a portable format, this reference has been expertly prepared by Association for Academic Surgery members and guides readers through techniques in reviewing academic literature, laboratory work, statistics and ethical issues.
- ArticleReynolds RJ.Mutat Res. 1978 Apr;50(1):43-56.A sensitive and quantitative procedure for the detection of pyrimidine dimers in yesast nuclear DNA is described. The assay employs dimer-specific, endonuclease activities from Micrococcus luteus together with DNA sedimentation through calibrated, alkaline sucrose gradients to detect endonuclease-induced, single-strand breaks. Breaks were induced in a dose-dependent manner from 0 to 80 J m-2 at 254 nm and in numbers equivalent to the numbers of dimers induced by similar doses (Unrau et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 312 (1973) 626--632). This procedure also allows the use of [6-3H] uridine to label cellular nucleic acids, but dose not require extensive DNA purification to eliminate concomitantly labeled RNA. Endonuclease-sensitive sites in the wild-type, haploid strain S288C, after irradiation with 5 J m-2 (254 nm), were removed in less than 5 min when cells were incubated in buffer (pH 7.0) at 28 degrees C. After irradiation with doses from 30 to 100 Jm-2 site removal in S288C required longer postirradiation incubations and was about 90% complete. In a radiation-sensitive strain carrying the mutant allele rad4-3 the number of endonuclease-sensitive sites remained constant for 6 h after irradiation with 5 Jm-2. The retention of sites in this strain indicates that it is defective in the excision of pyrimidine dimers.