Abstract

Previous biochemical studies have suggested that both X chromosomes produce gene products when cells of the LT-1 teratocarcinoma stem cell line are maintained in the undifferentiated state, and that dosage compensation, the biochemical manifestation of X inactivation, occurs when the cells are induced to differentiate in vitro (Martin et al., 1978). In this study the differentiation of LT-1 cells in vitro is described in detail, and data from cytogenetic studies of the time of X-chromosome replication in LT-1 cells are presented. They show that as long as the cells are maintained in the undifferentiated state both X chromosomes in each cell show the isocyclic replication pattern typical of a genetically active chromosome. However, when the LT-1 cells are induced to differentiate under appropriate conditions, one of the two X chromosomes in each cell of a large proportion of the population displays the allocyclic (either early or late) replication pattern typical of an inactive X chromosome. These data thus confirm that undifferentiated LT-1 cells contain two active X chromosomes and that X inactivation occurs in differentiating cultures of LT-1 cells. It is further demonstrated that there is a close temporal correlation between the biochemical and cytogenetic manifestations of the X-inactivation process. In addition, we observed that although X inactivation does not occur in the absence of morphological differentiation, it does not always occur when the cells differentiate in vitro.

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