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. 2000 Jul 10;44(1-2):31-40.
doi: 10.1016/s0165-022x(00)00049-x.

Analysis of radiation damage of DNA by atomic force microscopy in comparison with agarose gel electrophoresis studies

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Analysis of radiation damage of DNA by atomic force microscopy in comparison with agarose gel electrophoresis studies

M Murakami et al. J Biochem Biophys Methods. .

Abstract

DNA damage induced with ionizing radiation is considered one of the main causes of cell inactivation. Several methods including gel electrophoresis, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, neutral filter elution method, neutral sedimentation and electron microscopy have been applied to analyze this type of DNA damage. A new method employing an atomic force microscope (AFM) for nanometer-level-structure analysis of DNA damage induced with gamma-irradiation is introduced in this report. Structural changes of plasmid DNA on a molecular size scale of about 3 kbp were visually analyzed by AFM after irradiation with 60Co gamma-rays at doses of 1.9, 5.6, and 8.3 kGy. Three forms of plasmid DNA, closed circular (intact DNA), open circular (DNA with a single strand break) and linear form (DNA with a double strand break) were visualized by dynamic force mode AFM after gamma-irradiation. The torsional feature of the plasmid DNA was visualized better with AFM than with a transmission electron microscope (TEM). All three forms of plasmid DNA were observed in the sample irradiated with gamma-rays at the dose of 1.9 kGy. Open circular and linear forms were observed in the samples irradiated with gamma-rays at doses of 5.6 and 8.3 kGy, though no closed circular form was observed. A shortening of the length of a linear form of DNA irradiated with 5.6 and 8.3 kGy gamma-rays was observed by AFM. Structural changes of DNA after gamma-irradiation were visualized by AFM at nanometer level resolution. In addition, shortening of the length of the linear form of DNA after radiation exposure was observed by AFM.

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