DNA Fiber Mapping Techniques for the Assembly of High-resolution Physical MapsHeinz-Ulrich G. Weieraa Department of Subcellular Structure, Life Sciences Division, University of California, Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California Correspondence to: Heinz-Ulrich G. Weier, Dept. of Subcellular Structure, Life Sciences Division, MS 74-157, U. of California, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 1 Cyclotron Road, Berkeley, CA 94720. E-mail: ulliweier@hotmail.com
High-resolution physical maps are indispensable for directed sequencing projects or the finishing stages of shotgun sequencing projects. These maps are also critical for the positional cloning of disease genes and genetic elements that regulate gene expression. Typically, physical maps are based on ordered sets of large insert DNA clones from cosmid, P1/PAC/BAC, or yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) libraries. Recent technical developments provide detailed information about overlaps or gaps between clones and precisely locate the position of sequence tagged sites or expressed sequences, and thus support efforts to determine the complete sequence of the human genome and model organisms. Assembly of physical maps is greatly facilitated by hybridization of non-isotopically labeled DNA probes onto DNA molecules that were released from interphase cell nuclei or recombinant DNA clones, stretched to some extent and then immobilized on a solid support. The bound DNA, collectively called "DNA fibers," may consist of single DNA molecules in some experiments or bundles of chromatin fibers in others. Once released from the interphase nuclei, the DNA fibers become more accessible to probes and detection reagents. Hybridization efficiency is therefore increased, allowing the detection of DNA targets as small as a few hundred base pairs. This review summarizes different approaches to DNA fiber mapping and discusses the detection sensitivity and mapping accuracy as well as recent achievements in mapping expressed sequence tags and DNA replication sites. (J Histochem Cytochem 49:939948, 2001) Key Words: physical mapping, DNA fibers, hybridization, FISH, digital image analysis
High-resolution physical maps are indispensable for large-scale, cost-effective gene discovery. The construction of such maps of the human genome and model organisms therefore has been one of the major goals of the human genome project (
High-resolution maps providing ordered sets of cloned DNA fragments at the 100-kb level of resolution are assembled with smaller, more manageable DNA fragments isolated from other libraries. Most groups prefer cloning of genomic DNA in vectors that maintain relatively large DNA fragments without rearrangements, are non-chimeric, and allow easy DNA purification. In general, high-resolution maps are composed of overlapping cosmids (
In early applications of FISH-based clone ordering and assembly of physical maps,
The procedure, however, had two obvious problems. Fusion of human sperm with hamster eggs and fixation of pronuclei is a time-consuming, laborious process and might not scale well enough to meet the high-throughput requirements of most genome projects. The second shortfall of the procedure was a complete lack of control over the extent of DNA decondensation and orientation of pronuclei. This spurred efforts in the 1990s to manipulate chromatin or purified DNA molecules that could serve as a template for high-resolution physical mapping of DNA probes. The optimal procedure would be inexpensive, rapid, reproducible, and deliver mapping data limited only by the resolution of the light microscope. A decade later, we find ourselves equipped with an arsenal of complementary FISH-based mapping procedures that cover a very broad range of mapping intervals. Furthermore, the simultaneous development of more sensitive fluorescence detection reagents has pushed the limits of detection down to a few hundred basepairs (bp).
The expression "DNA fiber mapping" has become a collective name for quite different mapping techniques. As indicated in Fig 2, the diameter of DNA fibers increases as DNA molecules with a diameter of 2 nm are packed into chromatin ranging from 10 nm for histone-packed DNA molecules and 30 nm for chromatin fibers all the way to chromatids of 700 nm diameter. Chromatin can be released from interphase cell nuclei by various chemical or mechanical methods, and investigators tried to coin names that reflect their individual approach. Isolation of DNA from cell nuclei, extension, and preparation of chromatin or DNA fibers with diameters ranging in size from a few to several hundred nm (Fig 2) improves the accessibility of the DNA targets for both probes and detection reagents. Accordingly, the hybridization efficiencies increase, and DNA targets of less than 1 kb can be detected routinely using procedures normally applied in metaphase and interphase cell FISH.
In 1992, Heng et al. described the use of chemicals to release chromatin from interphase cell nuclei. The results look somewhat similar to the propidium iodide-stained free chromatin shown in Fig 1C.
If DNA molecules could be stretched uniformly in one direction, they might provide linear templates for visual FISH mapping.
In the following year,
Procedures published by 1995 allowed FISH for most preparations of decondensed nuclear or isolated cloned DNA and visualization of probe overlap to provide some information about the existence and size of gaps between clones (
We demonstrated that cloned DNA fragments can readily be mapped by FISH onto DNA molecules straightened by the hydrodynamic action of a receding meniscus and, referring to its quantitative nature, we termed our technique "Quantitative DNA Fiber Mapping (QDFM)" (
The subsequent studies of
Most mammalian genomes contain very large blocks of heterochromatin. Certain regions such as the (near)-centromeric heterochromatin seem to be involved in karyokinesis and chromosome association during meiosis (
Several groups applied DNA fiber mapping techniques to investigate the interface between euchromatic and heterochromatic regions as well as the organization of tandem DNA repeats in humans (
Physical Map Assembly
Linearly extended chromatin or DNA molecules are ideal substrates to study gene amplification or deletions.
Applications of DNA fiber mapping extend beyond map assembly and can provide valuable information for clone validation, definition of a minimal tiling path, and quality control in the sequence assembly process. Even more exciting, its high hybridization efficiency makes DNA fiber mapping the method of choice for visual mapping of expressed sequences.
Several approaches exist to map expressed sequences or to study the organization of larger genes. Gene fragments or entire cDNAs cloned in plasmid vectors can be amplified by in vitro DNA amplification using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), labeled with reporter molecules, and used as hybridization probes (
The organization of genes in transcribed sequences interrupted by intronic sequences can be easily demonstrated by DNA fiberFISH. We used QDFM in an attempt to resolve the structure of a gene from chromosome 20 frequently found amplified in human tumors ( Technical developments in recent years have opened the doors to mapping of even smaller exons. In 1996, Florijn et al. demonstrated the use of DNA halo preps for mapping of exons ranging in size from 202 to 778 bp. Co-hybridization of co-linear cosmid clones enabled this group to reproducibly locate exon fragments of about 200 bp on extended genomic DNA in the context of the cognate cosmid signal. Detection efficiencies of 7090% were found with probes larger than 400 bp, but the detection efficiency decreased to about 30% when fragments of about 200250 bp were mapped.
More recently, Aaltonen and co-workers (1997;
In the experiments conducted by
Despite intense efforts, the orderly activation of replication sites in genomes of higher organisms remains largely unexplained. The main reason for this may be the complexity of a process orchestrating the partly parallel activation of an estimated 104 to 106 replication sites.
DNA fiber mapping, with its high resolution and sensitivity, might provide important mapping information about the location and spacing of replication sites. Several groups used fiber mapping techniques to demonstrate replication forks in yeast (
Studies described by
The recent work of
Recent research has lead to major improvements in hybridization-based physical mapping procedures. Developments in DNA fiber mapping have reached the point of immediate practical utility: DNA probes as small as 500 bp can be mapped routinely onto immobilized templates composed of linear or circular DNA molecules that range in size from less than 10 kb to more than one Mbp. Uniform stretching facilitates the conversion of measured physical distances into genomic distances. The highly reproducible stretching procedures require analysis of only a few DNA molecules for accurate determination of map positions by multicolor fluorescence microscopy and digital image analysis. A mapping accuracy in the kb range coupled to efficient signal amplification procedures to visualize signals from small targets allows rapid assembly of high-resolution physical maps for large-scale sequencing and map closure as well as high-resolution maps of expressed sequences. DNA fiber mapping technologies will enhance performance of virtually all mapping and sequencing projects, including ongoing and future sequencing of model organisms and bacterial genomes. Implementation of these technologies will expedite sequencing by increasing parallelism, will lower the overall cost by reducing template redundancies, and will expedite map closure. Furthermore, the techniques will benefit the positional cloning of disease genes and characterization of genomic elements controlling their expression.
Supported by a grant from the Director, Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research, US Department of Energy, under Contract DE-AC03-76SF00098, by the "Training Program in Genome Research" sponsored by the University of California Systemwide Biotechnology Research and Education Program (#S96-03), and by a grant from the Breast Cancer Research Program, US Army Medical Research and Materiel Command, United States, Department of the Army (BC98-0937). Received for publication November 15, 2000; accepted March 26, 2001.
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