scholarly journals The effect of ribonuclease on rat-liver ribosomes

1968 ◽  
Vol 106 (1) ◽  
pp. 263-266 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Brentani ◽  
M. Brentani ◽  
I. Raw ◽  
J. L. M. Cunha ◽  
N. Wrotschincky

1. Rat-liver ribosomes lose about 50% of their amino acid-incorporating activity when preincubated with ribonuclease. 2. This preincubation results also in loss of about 50% of the original protein content and 75% of the RNA. 3. Ribosomes sedimented by ultracentrifugation, after preincubation with ribonuclease, show negligible contamination by crystalline enzyme. 4. Washing of ribosomes treated with ribonuclease releases further protein, restoring the original RNA/protein ratio. 5. The washed particle is again capable of promoting amino acid incorporation. 6. Examination of ribosomes treated with ribonuclease in the analytical ultracentrifuge reveals destruction of ribosomes, disappearance of dimers and a decrease in the sedimentation coefficient of monomers. 7. Washed ribosomes consist of even smaller particles with a sedimentation coefficient 60s.

1966 ◽  
Vol 101 (3) ◽  
pp. 627-631 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Korner

1. The liver ribosomes of rats given cycloheximide by intraperitoneal injection incorporate less amino acid into protein than ribosomes from control rat liver when they are incubated in vitro with excess of Sephadex-treated cell sap. The effect is rapid, marked and persistent. 2. Cell sap from liver of cycloheximide-treated animals is inhibitory but the inhibition can be relieved almost entirely by treating the cell sap with Sephadex. No damage has been done to the cell-sap factors: it is suggested that the dissolved cycloheximide in the cell sap causes the inhibition. 3. Cycloheximide added in vitro inhibits amino acid incorporation into protein in the presence or absence of polyuridylic acid. The inhibition is lessened by addition of excess of cell sap but is not abolished. 4. The differences between these results and those obtained with mouse liver (Trakatellis, Montjar & Axelrod, 1965) might arise because of species differences in sensitivity to the drug.


1962 ◽  
Vol 203 (4) ◽  
pp. 687-689 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Penhos ◽  
M. E. Krahl

Slices prepared from livers of bull frogs ( Rana catesbiana), pancreatectomized and/or hypophysectomized 7 days before, were incubated 2 hr in frog Ringer-bicarbonate solution at 25 C. Incorporation of leucine-1-C14 into protein was subnormal in the pancreatectomized series. The addition of insulin in vitro, with glucose also present in the medium, produced a significant ( P < 0.01) stimulation of amino acid incorporation in the following series: livers from normal fed animals; livers from animals pancreatectomized 7 days before; and livers from animals pancreatectomized and hypophysectomized 7 days before. Neither insulin nor glucose alone gave a significant effect. These results therefore confirm and extend those obtained with rat liver slices showing that insulin can stimulate amino acid incorporation into protein when added directly to liver. The effect is relatively greatest with livers from animals pancreatectomized 7 days before; the insulin effect does not depend on the presence of the pituitary, as it is obtainable with livers from animals hypophysectomized and pancreatectomized 7 days previously.


1974 ◽  
Vol 140 (3) ◽  
pp. 549-556 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. L. Boeckx ◽  
K. Dakshinamurti

The effect of administration of biotin to biotin-deficient rats on protein biosynthesis was studied. Biotin treatment resulted in stimulation by more than twofold of amino acid incorporation into protein, both in vivo and in vitro in rat liver, pancreas, intestinal mucosa and skin. Analysis of the products of amino acid incorporation into liver proteins in vivo and in vitro indicated that the synthesis of some proteins was stimulated more than twofold, but others were not stimulated at all. This indicates a specificity in the stimulation of protein synthesis mediated by biotin.


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