Abstract

By using a reverse Giemsa staining procedure (TT chromatin pale, TB chromatin dark) it is possible to detect replication in metaphase chromosomes with short (approximately 10 min) 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) pulses. A pulse protocol allows us to consider the question "What is replicating at this point in time?" and we have investigated replication patterns during cycle transit in stimulated human female lymphocytes. A clear-cut demarcation between R-zone early and G-zone late was not found. Instead, whilst replication commences (with a very staggered start) in R-zones, activity soon appears to transgress band boundaries and gives rise to cells with unclassifiable patterns where chromosomes take on a mottled or reticulate appearance. Replication in R-zones dies out leaving a clear G-zone pattern persisting for the remainder of S which terminates with a very staggered finish. When pulse duration is increased (approximately 1 h) the frequency of unclassifiable cells falls and occasional "mixed-pattern" cells appear which have, within the same cell, typical R- and G-zone regions. The existence of such cells indicates that if a mid-S replication pause exists (and the absence of any mid-S wave of pale stained cells suggests that it does not) it does not make exclusive separation between dark R- and G-band zones.

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