Description:
BLOOM SYNDROME; BLM
RECQ PROTEIN-LIKE 3; RECQL3
Repository
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NIGMS Human Genetic Cell Repository
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Subcollection |
Heritable Diseases Hereditary Cancers Chromosome Abnormalities |
Class |
Repair Defective and Chromosomal Instability Syndromes |
Class |
Syndromes with Increased Chromosome Breakage |
Cell Type
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Fibroblast
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Transformant
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Untransformed
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Race
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White
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Ethnicity
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ASHKENAZI
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Relation to Proband
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proband
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Confirmation
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Clinical summary/Case history
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Species
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Homo sapiens
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Common Name
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Human
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Remarks
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Passage Frozen |
15 |
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IDENTIFICATION OF SPECIES OF ORIGIN |
Species of Origin Confirmed by Nucleoside Phosphorylase, Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase, and Lactate Dehydrogenase Isoenzyme Electrophoresis and by Chromosome Analysis |
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DNASE ACTIVITY |
Mezzina et al (Nucleic Acids Res 17:3091-3106,1989) studied DNase activity in this Bloom's syndrome culture. The results presented indicated that the DNase specific activity in crude extracts of this culture was higher than in appropriate control cell cultures. |
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DNA LIGASE I AND II |
Kenne & Ljungquist (Eur J Biochem 174:465-470,1988) reported that this culture shows an increased DNA ligase activity. This activity is 2-3 fold higher than normal human fibroblasts & 5-20 fold higher than 3 other Bloom's syndrome fibroblasts (GM01493, GM02548, & GM03402). The DNA ligase activity in this culture is promoted by a heat-resistant, protease-sensitive factor comigrating with DNA ligases on singlestranded-DNA-cellulose. The factor stimulates DNA ligase I and DNA ligase II, and is not identical to the activity-promoting homologous DNA pairing, which is also enhanced in extracts of this culture. Mezzina et al (Nucleic Acids Res 17:3091-3106,1989) studied DNA ligase activity in this Bloom's syndrome culture. The results presented indicated that the DNA ligase specific activity in crude extracts of this culture was higher than in control cells and that the ligase activity correlated to a major 130 kDa polypeptide. |
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URACIL DNA GLYCOSYLASE |
Seal et al (Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 85:2339-2343,1988) reported that monoclonal antibody, 40.10.09, to normal uracil DNA glycosylase did not react with the uracil DNA glycosylase from this Bloom syndrome culture. Immunoreactivity of the denatured enzyme with antibody 40.10.09 was observed by immunoblot analysis (Vollberg et al, Carcinogenesis 8:1725-1729,1987). |
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Gene |
RECQL3 |
Chromosomal Location |
15q26.1 |
Allelic Variant 1 |
604610.0001; BLOOM SYNDROME |
Identified Mutation |
6-BP DEL/7-BP INS; In 4 ostensibly unrelated persons of Jewish ancestry, Ellis et al. [Cell 83: 655 (1995)] found homozygosity for a 6-bp deletion/7-bp insertion at nucleotide 2281 of the BLM cDNA. Deletion of ATCTGA and insertion of TAGATTC caused the insertion of the novel codons for LDSR after amino acid 736, and after these codons there was a stop codon. Ellis et al. [Cell 83: 655 (1995)] concluded that a person carrying this deletion/insertion mutation was a founder of the Ashkenazi-Jewish population, and that nearly all Ashkenazi Jews with Bloom syndrome inherited the mutation identical by descent from this common ancestor. |
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Gene |
RECQL3 |
Chromosomal Location |
15q26.1 |
Allelic Variant 2 |
604610.0001; BLOOM SYNDROME |
Identified Mutation |
6-BP DEL/7-BP INS; In 4 ostensibly unrelated persons of Jewish ancestry, Ellis et al. [Cell 83: 655 (1995)] found homozygosity for a 6-bp deletion/7-bp insertion at nucleotide 2281 of the BLM cDNA. Deletion of ATCTGA and insertion of TAGATTC caused the insertion of the novel codons for LDSR after amino acid 736, and after these codons there was a stop codon. Ellis et al. [Cell 83: 655 (1995)] concluded that a person carrying this deletion/insertion mutation was a founder of the Ashkenazi-Jewish population, and that nearly all Ashkenazi Jews with Bloom syndrome inherited the mutation identical by descent from this common ancestor. |
Remarks |
Clinically affected; B.S. Registry #44; increased sister chromatid exchange; chromosome breakage and unstable karyotype; increased post UV irradiation unscheduled DNA synthesis; donor subject is homozygous for a 6-bp deletion/7-bp insertion [6-bp del/7-bp ins] at nucleotide 2,281 of the open reading frame of the RECQL3 gene, which results in a frameshift and a stop codon; donor subject has T>G transversion at the nucleotide preceding the splice acceptor site AG of intron 5 in the p53 gene that results in aberrant splicing of exon 5 and exon 7, omitting exon 6; this mutation generates a transcript that is predicted to encode a truncated p53 protein containing only 189 amino acid residues due to frame shift and a premature stop codon. |
Mirmohammadsadegh A, Marini A, Nambiar S, Hassan M, Tannapfel A, Ruzicka T, Hengge UR, Epigenetic silencing of the PTEN gene in melanoma Cancer research66:6546-52 2006 |
PubMed ID: 16818626 |
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Rao VA, Fan AM, Meng L, Doe CF, North PS, Hickson ID, Pommier Y, Phosphorylation of BLM, dissociation from topoisomerase IIIalpha, and colocalization with gamma-H2AX after topoisomerase I-induced replication damage Molecular and cellular biology25:8925-37 2005 |
PubMed ID: 16199871 |
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Gao H, Chen XB, McGowan CH, Mus81 endonuclease localizes to nucleoli and to regions of DNA damage in human S-phase cells. Mol Biol Cell14(12):4826-34 2003 |
PubMed ID: 14638871 |
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Trikka D, Fang Z, Renwick A, Jones SH, Chakraborty R, Kimmel M, Nelson DL, Complex SNP-based haplotypes in three human helicases: implications for cancer association studies. Genome Res12(4):627-39 2002 |
PubMed ID: 11932247 |
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Hu P, Beresten SF, van Brabant AJ, Ye TZ, Pandolfi PP, Johnson FB, Guarente L, Ellis NA, Evidence for BLM and Topoisomerase IIIalpha interaction in genomic stability. Hum Mol Genet10(12):1287-98 2001 |
PubMed ID: 11406610 |
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Magnusson KP, Sandstrom M, Stahlberg M, Larsson M, Flygare J, Hellgren D, Wiman KG, Ljungquist S, p53 splice acceptor site mutation and increased HsRAD51 protein expression in Bloom's syndrome GM1492 fibroblasts. Gene246(1-2):247-54 2000 |
PubMed ID: 10767546 |
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Ishov AM, Sotnikov AG, Negorev D, Vladimirova OV, Neff N, Kamitani T, Yeh ET, Strauss JF 3rd, Maul GG, PML is critical for ND10 formation and recruits the PML-interacting protein daxx to this nuclear structure when modified by SUMO-1. J Cell Biol147:221-34 1999 |
PubMed ID: 10525530 |
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Foucault F, Vaury C, Barakat A, Thibout D, Planchon P, Jaulin C, Praz F, Amor-Gueret M, Characterization of a new BLM mutation associated with a topoisomerase II alpha defect in a patient with Bloom's syndrome. Hum Mol Genet6:1427-34 1997 |
PubMed ID: 9285778 |
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van Laar T, Steegenga WT, Jochemsen AG, Terleth C, van der Eb AJ, GM1492 human diploid skin fibroblasts lack the p53-dependent G1 cell-cycle checkpoint. Biochem Biophys Res Commun217:769-76 1995 |
PubMed ID: 8554597 |
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van Laar T, Steegenga WT, Jochemsen AG, Terleth C, van der Eb AJ, Bloom's syndrome cells GM1492 lack detectable p53 protein but exhibit normal G1 cell-cycle arrest after UV irradiation. Oncogene9:981-3 1994 |
PubMed ID: 8108144 |
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Lu X, Lane DP, Differential induction of transcriptionally active p53 following UV or ionizing radiation: defects in chromosome instability syndromes? Cell75:765-78 1993 |
PubMed ID: 8242748 |
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Poot M, Rudiger HW, Hoehn H, Detection of free radical-induced DNA damage with bromodeoxyuridine/Hoechst flow cytometry: implications for Bloom's syndrome. Mutat Res238:203-7 1990 |
PubMed ID: 1692968 |
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Seal G, Henderson EE, Sirover MA, Immunological alteration of the Bloom's syndrome uracil DNA glycosylase in Epstein-Barr virus-transformed human lymphoblastoid cells. Mutat Res243:241-8 1990 |
PubMed ID: 2155388 |
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Mezzina M, Nardelli J, Nocentini S, Remault G, Sarasin A, DNA ligase activity in human cell lines from normal donors and Bloom's syndrome patients. Nucleic Acids Res17:3091-106 1989 |
PubMed ID: 2726453 |
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Nicotera TM, Notaro J, Notaro S, Schumer J, Sandberg AA, Elevated superoxide dismutase in Bloom's syndrome: a genetic condition of oxidative stress. Cancer Res49:5239-43 1989 |
PubMed ID: 2766291 |
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Vollberg TM, Siegler KM, Cool BL, Sirover MA, Isolation and characterization of the human uracil DNA glycosylase gene. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A86:8693-7 1989 |
PubMed ID: 2813420 |
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Kenne K, Ljungquist S, Expression of a DNA-ligase-stimulatory factor in Bloom's syndrome cell line GM1492. Eur J Biochem174:465-70 1988 |
PubMed ID: 3391163 |
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Lehmann AR, Willis AE, Broughton BC, James MR, Steingrimsdottir H, Harcourt SA, Arlett CF, Lindahl T, Relation between the human fibroblast strain 46BR and cell lines representative of Bloom's syndrome. Cancer Res48:6343-7 1988 |
PubMed ID: 3180052 |
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Seal G, Brech K, Karp SJ, Cool BL, Sirover MA, Immunological lesions in human uracil DNA glycosylase: association with Bloom syndrome. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A85:2339-43 1988 |
PubMed ID: 3353381 |
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Bubley GJ, Schnipper LE, Effects of Bloom's syndrome fibroblasts on genetic recombination and mutagenesis of herpes simplex virus type 1. Somat Cell Mol Genet13:111-7 1987 |
PubMed ID: 3031825 |
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Tyrrell RM, Amaudruz F, Evidence for two independent pathways of biologically effective excision repair from its rate and extent in cells cultured from sun-sensitive humans. Cancer Res47:3725-8 1987 |
PubMed ID: 3109732 |
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Vollberg TM, Seal G, Sirover MA, Monoclonal antibodies detect conformational abnormality of uracil DNA glycosylase in Bloom's syndrome cells. Carcinogenesis8:1725-9 1987 |
PubMed ID: 3664966 |
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Willis AE, Lindahl T, DNA ligase I deficiency in Bloom's syndrome. Nature325:355-7 1987 |
PubMed ID: 3808031 |
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Brothman AR, Cram LS, Bartholdi MF, Kraemer PM, Preneoplastic phenotype and chromosome changes of cultured human Bloom syndrome fibroblasts (strain GM 1492). Cancer Res46:791-7 1986 |
PubMed ID: 3940643 |
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Hurt MM, Moses RE, Conversion of replicative intermediates in human DNA-repair defective cells. Exp Cell Res163:396-404 1986 |
PubMed ID: 3956584 |
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Kim S, Vollberg TM, Ro JY, Kim M, Sirover MA, O6-methylguanine methyltransferase increases before S phase in normal human cells but does not increase in hypermutable Bloom's syndrome cells. Mutat Res173:141-5 1986 |
PubMed ID: 3945242 |
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Ockey CH, Saffhill R, Delayed DNA maturation, a possible cause of the elevated sister- chromatid exchange in Bloom's syndrome. Carcinogenesis7:53-7 1986 |
PubMed ID: 3943145 |
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Hoehn H, Kurnit DM, Intraindividual Y-chromosome heteromorphism [letter] Hum Genet71:278 1985 |
PubMed ID: 4065902 |
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Gupta PK, Sirover MA, Altered temporal expression of DNA repair in hypermutable Bloom's syndrome cells. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A81:757-61 1984 |
PubMed ID: 6583674 |
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Kenne K, Ljungquist S, A DNA-recombinogenic activity in human cells. Nucleic Acids Res12:3057-68 1984 |
PubMed ID: 6232501 |
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Coohill TP, Moore SP, Grider RA, Action spectra (254-302 nm) for four human photosensitive cell lines. Photochem Photobiol38:105-7 1983 |
PubMed ID: 6622549 |
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Nicotera, Elevated superoxide dismutase activity in Bloom Syndrome fibroblasts. Am J Hum Genet35:49A (1983):105-7 1983 |
PubMed ID: 6622549 |
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Shmookler Reis RJ, Goldstein S, Mitochondrial DNA in mortal and immortal human cells. Genome number, integrity, and methylation. J Biol Chem258:9078-85 1983 |
PubMed ID: 6307991 |
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Taylor MW, Kothari RM, Holland GD, Martinez-Valdez H, Zeige G, A comparison of purine and pyrimidine pools in Bloom's syndrome and normal cells. Cancer Biochem Biophys7:19-25 1983 |
PubMed ID: 6667451 |
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Giannelli F, Botcherby PK, Avery JA, The effect of aphidicolin on the rate of DNA replication and unscheduled DNA synthesis of Bloom syndrome and normal fibroblasts. Hum Genet60:357-9 1982 |
PubMed ID: 6809595 |
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Mallick U, Rahmsdorf HJ, Yamamoto N, Ponta H, Wegner RD, Herrlich P, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate-inducible proteins are synthesized at an increased rate in Bloom syndrome fibroblasts. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A79:7886-90 1982 |
PubMed ID: 6961458 |
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Teo IA, Arlett CF, The response of a variety of human fibroblast cell strains to the lethal effects of alkylating agents. Carcinogenesis3:33-7 1982 |
PubMed ID: 7067035 |
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Bartram CR, Rudiger HW, Schmidt-Preuss U, Passarge E, Functional deficiency of fibroblasts heterozygous for Bloom syndrome as specific manifestation of the primary defect. Am J Hum Genet33:928-34 1981 |
PubMed ID: 7325155 |
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Emerit I, Cerutti P, Clastogenic activity from Bloom syndrome fibroblast cultures. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A78:1868-72 1981 |
PubMed ID: 6940194 |
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Henson P, Selsky CA, Little JB, Excision of ultraviolet damage and the effect of irradiation on DNA synthesis in a strain of Bloom's syndrome fibroblasts. Cancer Res41:760-6 1981 |
PubMed ID: 6257383 |
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Hirschi M, Netrawali MS, Remsen JF, Cerutti PA, Formation of DNA single-strand breaks by near-ultraviolet and gamma-rays in normal and Bloom's syndrome skin fibroblasts. Cancer Res41:2003-7 1981 |
PubMed ID: 7214368 |
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Schmidt-Preuss U, Maack P, Bartram CR, Rudiger HW, Mutagen-induced sister chromatid exchange rate in Bloom syndrome remains unaltered in the presence of Bloom corrective factor. Hum Genet58:432-3 1981 |
PubMed ID: 6799385 |
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Warren ST, Schultz RA, Chang CC, Wade MH, Trosko JE, Elevated spontaneous mutation rate in Bloom syndrome fibroblasts. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A78:3133-7 1981 |
PubMed ID: 6942420 |
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Zbinden I, Cerutti P, Near-ultraviolet sensitivity of skin fibroblasts of patients with Bloom's syndrome. Biochem Biophys Res Commun98:579-87 1981 |
PubMed ID: 7225114 |
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Alhadeff B, Velivasakis M, Pagan-Charry I, Wright WC, Siniscalco M, High rate of sister chromatid exchanges of Bloom's syndrome chromosomes is corrected in rodent human somatic cell hybrids. Cytogenet Cell Genet27:8-23 1980 |
PubMed ID: 7389421 |
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Arlett CF, Harcourt SA, Survey of radiosensitivity in a variety of human cell strains. Cancer Res40:926-32 1980 |
PubMed ID: 7471106 |
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Gupta RS, Goldstein S, Diphtheria toxin resistance in human fibroblast cell strains from normal and cancer-prone individuals. Mutat Res73:331-8 1980 |
PubMed ID: 7464842 |
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Hohmann P, Species- and cell-specific expression of H1 histones in tissue culture cells. Arch Biochem Biophys205:198-209 1980 |
PubMed ID: 7447476 |
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Krepinsky AB, Rainbow AJ, Heddle JA, Studies on the ultraviolet light sensitivity of Bloom's syndrome fibroblasts. Mutat Res69:357-68 1980 |
PubMed ID: 7360151 |
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Remsen JF, Repair of damage by N-acetoxy-2-acetylaminofluorene in Bloom's syndrome. Mutat Res72:151-4 1980 |
PubMed ID: 7442692 |
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Rudiger HW, Bartram CR, Harder W, Passarge E, Rate of sister chromatid exchanges in Bloom syndrome fibroblasts reduced by co-cultivation with normal fibroblasts. Am J Hum Genet32:150-7 1980 |
PubMed ID: 7386453 |
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Schonberg S, German J, Sister chromatid exchange in cells metabolically coupled to Bloom's syndrome cells. Nature284:72-4 1980 |
PubMed ID: 7354874 |
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Tetzner C, Juhl HJ, Rudiger HW, Sister-chromatid exchange induction by metabolically activated retinoids in human diploid fibroblast cultures. Mutat Res79:163-7 1980 |
PubMed ID: 6933309 |
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Weichselbaum RR, Nove J, Little JB, X-ray sensitivity of fifty-three human diploid fibroblast cell strains from patients with characterized genetic disorders. Cancer Res40:920-5 1980 |
PubMed ID: 7471105 |
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Cohen MM, Sagi M, Ben-Zur Z, Schaap T, Voss R, Kohn G, Ben-Bassat H, Ataxia telangiectasia: chromosomal stability in continuous lymphoblastoid cell lines. Cytogenet Cell Genet23:44-52 1979 |
PubMed ID: 761484 |
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German J, Bloom D, Passarge E, Bloom's syndrome. VII. Progress report for 1978. Clin Genet15:361-7 1979 |
PubMed ID: 436333 |
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Ockey CH, Quantitative replicon analysis of DNA synthesis in cancer-prone conditions and the defects in Bloom's syndrome. J Cell Sci40:125-44 1979 |
PubMed ID: 536382 |
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Selsky CA, Henson P, Weichselbaum RR, Little JB, Defective reactivation of ultraviolet light-irradiated herpesvirus by a Bloom's syndrome fibroblast strain. Cancer Res39:3392-6 1979 |
PubMed ID: 225021 |
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Moses RE, Beaudet AL, Apurinic DNA endonuclease activities in repair-deficient human cell lines. Nucleic Acids Res5:463-73 1978 |
PubMed ID: 634794 |
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Selsky, Defective host-cell reactivation of UV-i rradiated herpes simplex virus by Bloom's syndrome skin fibroblasts. (from DNA Repair Mechanisms, Academic Press, Inc) "DNA Repair Mechanisms"1978, pp 555:463-73 1978 |
PubMed ID: 634794 |
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German J, Bloom D, Passarge E, Fried K, Goodman RM, Katzenellenbogen I, Laron Z, Legum C, Levin S, Wahrman, Bloom's syndrome. VI. The disorder in Israel and an estimation of the gene frequency in the Ashkenazim. Am J Hum Genet29:553-62 1977 |
PubMed ID: 930922 |
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Cohen MM, Shaham M, Dagan J, Shmueli E, Kohn G, Cytogenetic investigations in families with ataxia-telangiectasia. Cytogenet Cell Genet15:338-56 1975 |
PubMed ID: 1222588 |
Passage Frozen |
15 |
Temperature |
37 C |
Percent CO2 |
5% |
Percent O2 |
AMBIENT |
Medium |
Eagle's Minimum Essential Medium with Earle's salts and non-essential amino acids with 2mM L-glutamine or equivalent |
Serum |
15% fetal bovine serum Not inactivated |
Substrate |
None specified |
Supplement |
- |
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