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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2007
May
New
technique will produce a better chromosome map
Diana Yates,
Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; diya@uiuc.edu
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Research
specialist Dmitri
V. Novikov, right, with graduate
student Mert Dikmen, left, and professor Andrew
Belmont, all in the cell and developmental biology
department, have developed a simple and economical
technique for imaging and mapping fruit fly chromosomes
(on the screen). |
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Released
5/7/07
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Researchers at the University of Illinois have developed a simple and
economical technique for imaging and mapping fruit fly chromosomes.
This new approach will enable them to construct the first accurate map
of the chromosomes and tease out the secrets hidden in their stripes.
Their work appears online May 6 in advance of publication in the journal
Nature Methods.
Fruit flies are well suited for chromosome studies because some of their
cells contain gigantic, “polytene” chromosomes, each built
up of more than 1,000 parallel copies of DNA strands. When stained,
condensed, dark bands and lighter regions (interbands) give the chromosomes
a striped appearance.
For more than 70 years, cytogeneticists have used a hand-drawn map of
the bands of fruit fly polytene chromosomes, with the shape and location
of these structures only vaguely delineated. This map, first published
in 1935, and generations of light and electron micrographs have yielded
an imprecise guide to the chromosomes.
Traditional methods of chromosome preparation have limited usefulness
for those hoping to sort out how the bands and interbands relate to
the underlying genetic sequence, said cell
and developmental biology research specialist Dmitri Novikov, who
developed the new technique. The genome of the fruit fly, Drosophila
melanogaster, was sequenced in 2000, and yet its relationship to chromosome
structure remains unclear.
“Since we want to know what genes are involved in the development
of different structures in living systems, this is the first structure
to look at,” Novikov said. “This is the starting point:
the appearance of the genes themselves.”
Cell and developmental biology professor and lead investigator Andrew
S. Belmont and visiting scientist Igor Kireev, of Moscow State University,
are co-authors on the paper. Belmont is in the U. of I. Institute
for Genomic Biology and the Center
for Biophysics and Computational Biology.
Current methods for preparing polytene cells for viewing under a light
microscope involve using a thumb, pencil, forceps or other instrument
to maneuver and press the cells between a glass coverslip and slide.
Only about 10 percent of the slides processed this way provide useable
images and even those rarely offer crisp structural details, Novikov
said.
The new approach includes two components: the use of mechanical devices
to spread and flatten the cells, and the application of computer-based
image processing to analyze hundreds of examples of the same chromosomes.
With so many crisp images to analyze, computer algorithms can accurately
calculate the number, shape and location of the chromosome bands.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Developers
of the new approach use a technology called Computer
Vision to analyze hundreds of crisp images of the
same chromosomes.
This will allow the production of a much more precise
map of the
chromosome bands. |
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“Two researchers might see the same image differently,”
said graduate research assistant Mert Dikmen, who uses computer vision
technologies under the supervision of Beckman
Institute professor Thomas Huang to analyze the images. “Our
system will give an impartial estimate of the band location. It will
not be researcher-dependent. It will be objective.”
To improve chromosome spreading, researchers use a rotary tool that
vibrates the coverslip surface for several minutes. A simple mechanical
vise applies up to two tons of force to each slide, rendering the preparations
very thin and high in contrast. This allows the production of much clearer,
information-packed images.
The technique has other advantages: Because it relies on light microscopy,
it is faster and more economical than electron microscopy, with comparable
or superior results.
With a more accurate chromosome map, researchers will next use fluorescent
immunostaining of proteins that bind to specific DNA sequences. These
landmarks will help them tease out the relationship of the sequence
to the physical structure.
The new approach will allow scientists to answer fundamental questions
about chromosome structure, Novikov said. Such questions have relevance
across species.
Editor’s note: To reach, call 217-333-8372; e-mail: novikov@uiuc.edu.
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