European Journal of Histochemistry (Dec 2012)

DNA breakage detection-fluorescence in situ hybridization (DBD-FISH) in buccal cells

  • E. I. Cortés-Gutiérrez,
  • M. I. Davila-Rodríguez,
  • J. L. Fernández,
  • C. López-Fernández,
  • J. Gosalvez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4081/ejh.2012.e49
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 56, no. 4
pp. e49 – e49

Abstract

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DNA breakage detection-fluorescence in situ hybridization (DBD-FISH) is a recently developed technique that allows cell-by-cell detection and quantification of DNA breakage in the whole genome or within specific DNA sequences. The present investigation was conducted to adapt the methodology of DBD-FISH to the visualization and evaluation of DNA damage in buccal epithelial cells. DBD-FISH revealed that DNA damage increased significantly according to H2O2 concentration (r2=0.91). In conclusion, the DBD-FISH technique is easy to apply in buccal cells and provides prompt results that are easy to interpret. Future studies are needed to investigate the potential applicability of a buccal cell DBD-FISH model to human biomonitoring and nutritional work.

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