DNA fragmentation during apoptosis is caused by frequent single-strand cuts.

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RESUMO

One of the hallmarks of apoptosis is the digestion of genomic DNA by an endonuclease, generating a ladder of small fragments of double-stranded DNA. We have examined the nature of the DNA breaks produced in mouse thymocytes triggered to undergo apoptosis by steroids or by stimulation of the T cell receptor. Whereas the typical ladder pattern of oligonucleosomal fragments was observed after agarose gel electrophoresis, numerous single-strand cuts were detected after electrophoresis under denaturing conditions. Single-strand nicks were found to be very frequent in the internucleosomal regions, but also to occur in the core particle-associated DNA. An identical pattern of single-strand nicks was obtained when chromatin DNA was exposed to the single-strand cleaving deoxyribonuclease I. The nicked DNA fragments, extracted from apoptotic thymocytes, were sensitive to the action of S1-nuclease. We propose that DNA fragmentation induced during apoptosis is not due to a double-strand cutting enzyme as previously postulated, but rather is the result of single-strand breaks. This ensures the dissociation of the DNA molecule at sites where cuts are found within close proximity.

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