Abstract
Most of the DNA molecules within an animal cell are repressed for RNA
synthesis at any one time, and those DNA molecules that are active are
characteristic of the particular tissue or organ within which the cell has
differentiated (1). This phenomena of differential gene transcription is
thought to be the epigenetic basis for such diverse cell activities as cell
differentiation organ regeneration, neoplastic transformation, immune
activation, and the response to steroid hormones (2).
Carcinogenic chemicals, oncogenic viruses, embryogenic RNA, immune RNA,
and steroid hormones all prefer to bind to single-stranded regions within
DNA molecules of the host cell (3). DNA molecules which are active in RNA
synthesis display short loops of such single-stranded DNA (4), which are a
necessary prerequisite for the gene de-repression characteristic of animal
neoplasms (5).
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)