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Normalisation of sister chromatid exchange frequencies in Bloom's syndrome by euploid cell hybridisation

Abstract

BLOOM'S syndrome (BS) is a rare autosomal recessive genetic disorder characterised by stunted growth, Sun-sensitive telangiectatic erythema of the face and an abnormally high risk of cancer1. Cultured lymphocytes and fibroblasts from BS patients have a high frequency of spontaneous structural chromosome aberrations and characteristically high levels of sister chromatid exchanges (SCE)2. The primary defect at the molecular level is unknown, but the cytological findings are compatible with a deficiency in a DNA repair function3. The presence of a defect of DNA replication is also suggested by the demonstration that the rate of fork motion during replication in BS is slower than normal4. German et al.5 have reported the coexistence of cells with both high and normal levels of SCE, suggesting that the defect in BS is regulatory. Tice et al.6 concluded from co-cultivation experiments that SCE frequency is mediated by a diffusable agent(s) present in the medium of BS fibroblasts. Other investigators, however have shown suppression of SCE in conditions of co-cultivation7,8. We have clarified the conflict between these results by examining euploid somatic cell hybrids between BS and normal human fibroblasts.

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BRYANT, E., HOEHN, H. & MARTIN, G. Normalisation of sister chromatid exchange frequencies in Bloom's syndrome by euploid cell hybridisation. Nature 279, 795–796 (1979). https://doi.org/10.1038/279795a0

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