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. 1985 Jun-Jul;150(1-2):423-9.
doi: 10.1016/0027-5107(85)90139-3.

Genetic complementation between UV-sensitive CHO mutants and xeroderma pigmentosum fibroblasts

Genetic complementation between UV-sensitive CHO mutants and xeroderma pigmentosum fibroblasts

L H Thompson et al. Mutat Res. 1985 Jun-Jul.

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine the feasibility of doing complementation analysis between DNA-repair mutants of CHO cells and human fibroblasts based on the recovery of hybrid cells resistant to DNA damage. Two UV-sensitive CHO mutant lines, UV20 and UV41, which belong to different genetic complementation groups, were fused with fibroblasts of xeroderma pigmentosum in various complementation groups. Selection for complementing hybrids was performed using a combination of ouabain to kill the XP cells and mitomycin C to kill the CHO mutants. Because the frequency of viable hybrid clones was generally less than 10(-6) and the frequency of revertants of each CHO mutant was approximately 2 X 10(-7), putative hybrids required verification. The hybrid character of clones was established by testing for the presence of human DNA in a dot-blot procedure. Hybrid clones were obtained from 9 of the 10 different crosses involving 5 complementation groups of XP cells. The 4 attempted crosses with 2 other XP groups yielded no hybrid colonies. Thus, a definitive complementation analysis was not possible. Hybrids were evaluated for their UV resistance using a rapid assay that measures differential cytotoxicity (DC). All 9 hybrids were more resistant than the parental mutant CHO and XP cells, indicating that in each case complementation of the CHO repair defect by a human gene had occurred. 3 hybrids were analyzed for their UV-radiation survival curves and shown to be much more resistant that the CHO mutants but less resistant than normal CHO cells. With 2 of these hybrids, sensitive subclones, which had presumably lost the complementing gene, were found to have similar sensitivity to the parental CHO mutants. We conclude that the extremely low frequency of viable hybrids in this system limits the usefulness of the approach. The possibility remains that each of the nonhybridizing XP strains could be altered in the same locus as one of the CHO mutants.

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