thioguanine-anhydrous and Infectious-Mononucleosis

thioguanine-anhydrous has been researched along with Infectious-Mononucleosis* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for thioguanine-anhydrous and Infectious-Mononucleosis

ArticleYear
Chemical mutagenesis at the phosphoribosyltransferase locus in cultured human lymphoblasts.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 1972, Volume: 69, Issue:5

    The presence of selectable genetic markers in long-term human lymphoblast cultures would facilitate cell hybridization experiments on the biosynthesis of immunoglobulins, as well as other studies. This work reports the induction with ethylmethane sulfonate of 6-thioguanine - resistant, phosphoribosyltransferase - deficient mutants in a lymphoblast line from a patient with infectious mononucleosis. These cells were unusually sensitive, with a D(0) value of 28 mug of ethylmethane sulfonate per ml; the sensitivity curve followed a biphasic pattern suggesting the presence of 3% resistant cells. Ethylmethane sulfonate increased the frequency of mutants resistant to 6-thioguanine over 100-fold, to about 2 x 10(-4); nitrosoguanidine was less effective. Almost all the mutants contained considerably less than 1% of the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.8) activity of wild-type cells. The mutation did not appear to result from loss of an X chromosome.

    Topics: Alkanes; Cell Line; Cells, Cultured; Chromosome Aberrations; Female; Gene Frequency; Genetic Code; Humans; Hybridization, Genetic; Infectious Mononucleosis; Inosine Nucleotides; Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome; Lymphocytes; Mutation; Nitrosoguanidines; Pentosephosphates; Pentosyltransferases; Selection, Genetic; Sulfonic Acids; Thioguanine

1972