Abstract

An isolation procedure has been developed which yielded five clones of haploid frog cells which are sensitive to ultraviolet light. This procedure employed a conventional mutagenesis, followed by time for phenotypic expression and then an enrichment for UV-sensitive mutants. The enrichment relies upon the uptake of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) by repairing cells following UV-induced damage, rendering repair-proficient cells differentially sensitive to photolysis by black light. The photolysis is potentiated by use of the bisbenzimidazole dye Hoechst 33258. The enriched population was screened for radiation-sensitive isolates resulting in 5 sensitives from 96 tested. No mutants were obtained from 300 isolates tested from a population which had not undergone enrichment.

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