Abstract

For determination of the cellular location of small polydisperse circular DNA complexes, rat myoblastic L6 cells, HeLa cells, and mouse L cells were enucleated and processed by the micapress-adsorption method for electron microscopy (H. Yamagishi, T. Kunisada, and T. Tsuda, 1982, Plasmid 8, 299-306). Small circular DNA complexes from intact cells showed a heterogeneous size distribution of from 0.1 to more than 2 micron with a mean contour length of 0.6 to 0.8 micron, like that of covalently closed circular DNAs. Cells contained 400 to 1200 copies. The size distribution in the cytoplasts was narrow and the number-average length was 0.3 to 0.4 micron, whereas that in L6 karyoplasts was wide and the average length was 0.9 micron. The longer circular complexes appeared to be absent from the cytoplasts. The origin and biological functions of these complexes are discussed in relation to the cellular locations of the complexes.

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