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Kinetics of comet formation in single‐cell gel electrophoresis: Loops and fragments
Author(s) -
Afanasieva Katerina,
Zazhytska Marianna,
Sivolob Andrei
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
electrophoresis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.666
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1522-2683
pISSN - 0173-0835
DOI - 10.1002/elps.200900421
Subject(s) - comet assay , comet , dna , comet tail , dna damage , gel electrophoresis , ethidium bromide , kinetics , biophysics , chemistry , fragmentation (computing) , physics , biology , biochemistry , plasma , astrophysics , ecology , quantum mechanics , solar wind
We investigated the mechanisms of DNA exit during single‐cell gel electrophoresis (the comet assay) by measuring the kinetics of the comet tail formation. In the neutral comet assay, the rate of DNA exit was found to be dependent on the topological state of DNA, which was influenced by either ethidium bromide or a low radiation dose. The results clearly show that the comet tail is formed by extended DNA loops: the loop extension, being reversible when the DNA torsional constraint remains in the loops, is favored when the constraint is relaxed. The kinetics of the comet formation in the case of a high radiation dose points out that accumulation of the single‐strand breaks causes DNA fragmentation. In contrast to the neutral comet assay, the alkaline comet assay is not related to the chromatin loops. Our results imply that the alkaline treatment induces detachment of the loops from the nuclear matrix, and the comet tail is formed by ssDNA fragments, the ends of which are pulled out from the comet head by electric force. We suggest that the kinetic approach can be considered as an important improvement of the comet assay.