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The DNA combing method allows the analysis of DNA replication at the level of individual DNA molecules stretched along silane-coated glass coverslips. Before DNA extraction, ongoing DNA synthesis is labeled with halogenated analogues of thymidine. Replication tracks are visualized by immunofluorescence using specific antibodies. Unlike biochemical and NGS-based methods, DNA combing provides unique information on cell-to-cell variations in DNA replication profiles, including initiation and elongation. Finally, this assay can be used to monitor the effect of DNA lesions on fork progression, arrest and restart.
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[Abstract] The DNA combing method allows the analysis of DNA replication at the level of individual DNA molecules stretched along silane-coated glass coverslips. Before DNA extraction, ongoing DNA synthesis is labeled with halogenated analogues of thymidine. Replication tracks are visualized by immunofluorescence using specific antibodies. Unlike biochemical and NGS-based methods, DNA combing provides unique information on cell-to-cell variations in DNA replication profiles, including initiation and elongation. Finally, this assay can be used to monitor the effect of DNA lesions on fork progression, arrest and restart.
Keywords: Replication, Yeast, Human cells, Fork speed, Replication origin, DNA stretching
[Background] DNA synthesis is initiated at thousands of sites on eukaryotic chromosomes called replication origins. Origin activation follows a well-defined replication timing program that is controlled by checkpoint kinases and epigenetic modifications of chromatin (Prioleau and MacAlpine, 2016). Replication forks frequently stall during a normal S phase. Fork arrest is caused by multiple events, such as DNA lesions, tightly bound protein complexes, and transcription at highly expressed genes (Tourriere and Pasero 2007; Zeman and Cimprich, 2013). Eukaryotes have developed different strategies to deal with this replication stress, including repair mechanisms to restart arrested forks and activation of dormant replication origins to rescue terminally-arrested forks. DNA combing is a method of choice to monitor different aspects of replication (fork speed, origin usage, fork restart, sister fork asymmetry). Unlike other DNA fiber methods such as DNA fiber spreading, the stretching, density and alignment of DNA molecules are highly reproducible and tightly controlled in the DNA combing method. Stretching is imposed by the force exerted by a receding air/water interface, independently of the length of DNA fibers (Bensimon et al., 1994; Michalet et al., 1997). Origin firing and progression of replication forks are followed after incorporation of thymidine analogs, such as 5-bromo-2’-deoxyuridine (BrdU), 5-iodo-2’-deoxyuridine (IdU) and 5-chloro-2’-deoxyuridine (CldU) in newly-synthesized DNA. This technique has been successfully used to monitor DNA replication dynamics in a variety of organisms, including bacteria, yeast, Drosophila, Xenopus and mammals. Here, we provide detailed protocols to analyze newly synthetized DNA fibers in budding yeast and in human cells and to investigate various aspects of DNA replication in normal growth conditions and under replicative stress.
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Acknowledgments
We thank the members of the Pasero laboratory for their contribution to the optimization of this protocol, which was adapted from protocols of several other groups, including the Bensimon, Schwob, Debatisse and Nurse laboratories. We thank the Montpellier RIO Imaging facility for support and the DNA combing facility of Montpellier for providing silanized coverslips. This work was supported by grants from Agence Nationale pour la Recherche (ANR), Institut National du Cancer (INCa), Ligue contre le Cancer (Equipe labellisée LIGUE, 2017) and the MSDAvenir fund.
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