DNA laddering
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DNA laddering is a phenomenon seen in laboratory tests; it is a sensitive indicator of programmed cell death, specifically of apoptosis.
Endonuclease activation is a characteristic feature of apoptosis. This degrades genomic DNA at internucleosomal linker regions and produces 180- to 185- base-pair DNA fragments. On agarose gel electrophoresis, these give a characteristic "laddered" appearance. The dying cell's morphological changes are short-lived and difficult to detect. DNA laddering has therefore become a sensitive method to distinguish apoptosis from ischemic or toxic cell death.
[edit] Citations
- M Iwata, D Myerson, B Torok-Storb and RA Zager (1996). An evaluation of renal tubular DNA laddering in response to oxygen deprivation and oxidant injury. Retrieved on 17 April 2006.