Abstract

BackgroundThe blood plasma and other intertissue fluids usually contain a certain amount of DNA, getting there due to a natural cell death in the organism. Cells of this organism can capture the extracellular DNA, whereupon it is delivered to various cell compartments. It is hypothesized that the extracellular DNA is involved in the transfer of genetic information and its fixation in the genome of recipient cell.ResultsThe existence of an active flow of extracellular DNA into the cell is demonstrated using human breast adenocarcinoma (MCF-7) cells as a recipient culture. The qualitative state of the DNA fragments delivered to the main cell compartments (cytoplasm and interchromosomal fraction) was assessed. The extracellular DNA delivered to the cell is characterized quantitatively.ConclusionIt is demonstrated that the extracellular DNA fragments in several minutes reach the nuclear space, where they are processed so that their linear size increases from about 500 bp to 10,000 bp. The amount of free extracellular DNA fragments simultaneously present in the nuclear space may reach up to 2% of the haploid genome. Using individual DNA fragments with a known molecular weight and sequence as an extracellular DNA, it is found that these fragments degrade instantly in the culture liquid in the absence of a competitor DNA and are delivered into the cell as degradants. When adding a sufficient amount of competitor DNA, the initial undegraded molecules of the DNA fragments with the known molecular weight and sequence are detectable both in the cytoplasm and nuclear space only at the zero point of experiments. The labeled precursor α-dNTP*, added to culture medium, was undetectable inside the cell in all the experiments.

Highlights

  • The blood plasma and other intertissue fluids usually contain a certain amount of DNA, getting there due to a natural cell death in the organism

  • Few papers today report the interactions between the extracellular DNA and the cell, namely, covering the issues of what DNA and in what form exists in the intercellular space, how the DNA is captured from the pericellular space, what occurs with the DNA in the cytoplasm, and how it behaves in the nuclear space

  • We focused the attention on research into the behavior of fragmented DNA when it enters the cell compartments of MCF-7 cells

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Summary

Introduction

The blood plasma and other intertissue fluids usually contain a certain amount of DNA, getting there due to a natural cell death in the organism. Cells of this organism can capture the extracellular DNA, whereupon it is delivered to various cell compartments. Even less number of papers allows the overall fate of the extracellular DNA to be traced commencing from the moment it enters the intercellular medium (blood plasma and intertissue fluid) resulting from apoptosis or other cellular processes through its capture by the cell and delivery to internal cell compartments to eventual integration into the recipient genome or otherwise utilization. This paper determined all the main directions connected with the effects of extracellular DNA on the cell that are somehow or other studied by the experimenters

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