Messenger ribonucleic acid of cerebral nuclei.


Autoria(s): Bondy, SC; Roberts, S
Cobertura

1111 - 1118

Data(s)

01/12/1967

Resumo

1. RNA was isolated from crude nuclear preparations and from ribosomes derived from rat brain and liver. Nuclear RNA was obtained by lysis of the nuclei with sodium dodecyl sulphate, followed by denaturation and removal of DNA and protein with hot phenol. 2. Base composition analyses indicated that the cerebral nuclear RNA preparation contained a higher proportion of non-ribosomal RNA than the analogous hepatic preparation. 3. Sucrose-density-gradient analyses revealed a heterogeneous profile for each nuclear RNA preparation, with two major peaks possessing the sedimentation properties of ribosomal RNA (18s and 28s). 4. Template activities of both preparations were widely distributed through the sucrose density gradients. 5. The cerebral nuclear RNA preparation was more active than the hepatic nuclear RNA preparation in promoting amino acid incorporation in cell-free systems from Escherichia coli and rat brain. 6. Cerebral nuclear RNA stimulated amino acid incorporation in a cerebral ribosomal system even in the presence of an excess of purified E. coli transfer RNA. 7. It is concluded that a significant proportion of cerebral nuclear RNA has the characteristics of messenger RNA.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

qt6j37d9m1

http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/6j37d9m1

Idioma(s)

english

Publicador

eScholarship, University of California

Direitos

Attribution (CC BY): http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Fonte

Bondy, SC; & Roberts, S. (1967). Messenger ribonucleic acid of cerebral nuclei.. The Biochemical journal, 105(3), 1111 - 1118. doi: 10.1042/bj1051111. UC Irvine: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/6j37d9m1

Tipo

article