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. 1994 Jul 11;22(13):2447–2452. doi: 10.1093/nar/22.13.2447

Formation of extrachromosomal circular DNA in HeLa cells by nonhomologous recombination.

N van Loon 1, D Miller 1, J P Murnane 1
PMCID: PMC308194  PMID: 8041604

Abstract

Extrachromosomal circular DNA (eccDNA) generated from chromosomal DNA is found in all mammalian cells and increases with cell stress or aging. Studies of eccDNA structure and mode of formation provide insight into mechanisms of instability of the mammalian genome. Previous studies have suggested that eccDNA is generated through a process involving recombination between repetitive sequences. However, we observed that approximately one half of the small eccDNA fragments cloned from HeLa S3 cells were composed entirely of nonrepetitive or low-copy DNA sequences. We analyzed four of these fragments by polymerase chain reaction and nucleotide sequencing and found that they were complete eccDNAs. We then screened a human genomic library with the eccDNAs to isolate the complementary chromosomal sequences. Comparing the recombination junctions within the eccDNAs with the chromosomal sequences from which they were derived revealed that nonhomologous recombination was involved in their formation. One of the eccDNAs was composed of two separate sequences from different parts of the genome. These results suggest that rejoining of ends of fragmented DNA is responsible for the generation of a substantial portion of the eccDNAs found in HeLa S3 cells.

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Selected References

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