Molecular Combing of Single DNA Molecules on the 10 Megabase Scale

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Abstract

DNA combing allows the investigation of DNA replication on genomic single DNA molecules, but the lengths that can be analysed have been restricted to molecules of 200-500 kb. We have improved the DNA combing procedure so that DNA molecules can be analysed up to the length of entire chromosomes in fission yeast and up to 12 Mb fragments in human cells. Combing multi-Mb-scale DNA molecules revealed previously undetected origin clusters in fission yeast and shows that in human cells replication origins fire stochastically forming clusters of fired origins with an average size of 370 kb. We estimate that a single human cell forms around 3200 clusters at mid S-phase and fires approximately 100,000 origins to complete genome duplication. The procedure presented here will be adaptable to other organisms and experimental conditions.

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Kaykov, A., Taillefumier, T., Bensimon, A., & Nurse, P. (2016). Molecular Combing of Single DNA Molecules on the 10 Megabase Scale. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep19636

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