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1.
Phospholipid interactions in rat liver nuclear matrix   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Rat liver nuclear matrix has been isolated by salt extraction and nuclease digestion of nuclei. Under the electron microscope, the matrix appears as a spongelike network joined by thinner fibrils. Biochemical analysis shows a high protein content and low amounts of nucleic acid and phospholipid. Treatment of the matrix with phospholipase C results in a release of most of the nucleic acid, and a disappearance of the fibrils, however the appearance of the matrix is largely unaffected. It seems likely that phospholipids are responsible for the hydrophobic interactions between nucleic acids and matrix fibrils. From in vitro labelling studies the released DNA is more recently synthesised than the bulk material, however the matrix bound RNA appears to label less rapidly than total nuclear RNA.  相似文献   

2.
It was shown that within the liposomes mono- and oligonucleotides and their alkylating derivatives penetrate the cells of Ehrlich ascite carcinoma and peritoneal exudate of the mice. Inside the cells the alkylating reagents are mainly utilized for modification of proteins (42--76%), RNA (5--16%) and DNA (3--9%). Presumably DNA modification is largely dependent on the penetration of the reagents into the nuclei. No significant differences in alkylation of the cell components by oligoadenylate derivatives, capable of complementary interactions with nucleic acids and mononucleotide derivatives, incapable of such interactions, were observed.  相似文献   

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Oligonucleotide reagents bearing aromatic azido groups of different structures were shown to be suitable for nucleoside specific photomodification of nucleic acids. Modification of the pentadecanucleotide targets d(TAAGTGGAGTTTGGC), d(TAAGTGGAAAAAAAA), d(TAAGTGGACCCCCCC) and d(TAAGTGGATTTTTTT) was investigated with reagents d(UCH2OCH2CH2NHCORCCACTT) carrying a photoactive group R(R1-n-azidotetrafluorophenyl-reagent (I), R2-2-nitro-5-azidophenyl-reagent (II) and R3-n-azidophenyl-reagent (III)) at C-5-modified deoxyuridine. Photomodification did not exceed 5% for the targets in case of reagent (III); the modification extent was 25-50% depending on the target sequence for reagent (II); reagent (I) with perfluoro azido group was the most effective, that provided 60-70% of modification. Reagents (I) and (II) were found to be sensitive to the nucleoside sequence of the target: the most vulnerable sites for reagent (I) and (II) were guanine and cytosine residues, respectively. These bases were modified predominantly when being adjacent to the addressed site of the target.  相似文献   

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Recent developments in cellular and molecular biology require the accurate quantification of DNA and RNA in large numbers of samples at a sensitivity that enables determination on small quantities. In this study, five current methods for nucleic acid quantification were compared: (i) UV absorbance spectroscopy at 260 nm, (ii) colorimetric reaction with orcinol reagent, (iii) colorimetric reaction based on diphenylamine, (iv) fluorescence detection with Hoechst 33258 reagent, and (v) fluorescence detection with thiazole orange reagent. Genomic DNA of three different microbial species (with widely different G+C content) was used, as were two different types of yeast RNA and a mixture of equal quantities of DNA and RNA. We can conclude that for nucleic acid quantification, a standard curve with DNA of the microbial strain under study is the best reference. Fluorescence detection with Hoechst 33258 reagent is a sensitive and precise method for DNA quantification if the G+C content is less than 50%. In addition, this method allows quantification of very low levels of DNA (nanogram scale). Moreover, the samples can be crude cell extracts. Also, UV absorbance at 260 nm and fluorescence detection with thiazole orange reagent are sensitive methods for nucleic acid detection, but only if purified nucleic acids need to be measured.  相似文献   

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Low-temperature-induced nonculturable cells of the human pathogenic bacterium Vibrio vulnificus retained significant amounts of nucleic acids for more than 5 months. Upon permeabilization of fixed cells, however, an increasing number of cold-incubated cells released the nucleic acids. This indicates substantial degradation of DNA and RNA in nonculturable cells prior to fixation. Treatment of permeabilized cells with DNase and RNase allowed differential staining of DNA and RNA with the nucleic acid dye 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). Epifluorescence microscopy revealed that the could-induced nonculturable populations of V. vulnificus are highly heterogeneous with regard to their nucleic acid content. The fraction of nonculturable cells which maintained DNA and RNA structures decreased gradually during cold incubation. After 5 months at 5 degrees C, less than 0.05% of the cells could be observed to retain DNA and RNA. In parallel with the loss of nucleic acids, an increase in the concentrations of UV-absorbing material in the culture supernatants was observed in nonculturable-cell suspensions. It is hypothesized that there are two phases of the formation of nonculturable cells of V. vulnificus: the first involves a loss of culturability with maintenance of cellular integrity and intact RNA and DNA (and thus possibly viability), and the second is typified by a gradual degradation of nucleic acids, the products of which partly remain inside the cells and partly diffuse into the extracellular space. A small number of nonculturable cells, however, retain DNA and RNA, and thus may be viable despite having reduced culturability.  相似文献   

10.
Fe(III)-bleomycin associates strongly with rat liver nuclei and binds to nuclear DNA. Metal-free and Cu(II)-bleomycin, however, do not bind to nuclei. The treatment of nuclei with activated iron-bleomycin results in nucleic base and base propenal release from the DNA, and also gives membrane peroxidation. Isolation and quantitation of the base propenals and free bases released subsequent to activated bleomycin treatment reveal an alteration in the stoichiometry of these products compared to those released from purified DNA. With nuclei, significantly less propenal is formed, although the yield of free base is equivalent to that from purified DNA. The membrane peroxidation products from nuclei are the same as those obtained from microsomal membranes treated with activated bleomycin. Superoxide dismutase inhibits the membrane peroxidation but has no effect on the DNA breakage reactions. The results implicate a role for iron in mediating the in vivo action of bleomycin and also reveal a potentially toxic effect, membrane peroxidation, separate from DNA damage.  相似文献   

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Using acridine orange staining and flow cytometry the DNA and RNA levels (arbitrary units) of individual cells may be established. Here, this method has been applied to nuclei isolated from plant protoplasts during culture. The specificity of the technique has been validated for such plant material; ribonuclease markedly reduced nuclear staining without modifying the DNA histogram; ribonuclease inhibitor prevented the action of released cell nucleases; and protoplasts cultivated with actinomycin D did not synthesize RNA. First RNA synthesis was evident 18 h after Petunia hybrida protoplasts had been put into culture. An increase of RNA above a critical level was required for cells to be able to initiate DNA replication from G1, termed G1B. G2 nuclei had an RNA:DNA ratio similar to that of G1 nuclei.  相似文献   

13.
A new method for the isolation of tissue culture cell nuclei is presented which involves incubation of the nuclei in the presence of Cu2+- or Zn2+-ions. This method eliminates the danger of nuclear aggregation and permits nuclear matrix isolation and subsequent fractionation. Stabilization of the inner matrix by Cu2-ions permits analysis of the role of nucleic acids in the maintenance of the matrix structure. It is shown that solubilization of more than 95% of matrix-bound DNA and more than 90% of matrix-bound RNA did not cause any significant changes in the nuclear matrix structure.  相似文献   

14.
Chemically modified nucleic acids (CNAs) are widely explored as antisense oligonucleotide or small interfering RNA (siRNA) candidates for therapeutic applications. CNAs are also of interest in diagnostics, high‐throughput genomics and target validation, nanotechnology and as model systems in investigations directed at a better understanding of the etiology of nucleic acid structure, as well as the physicochemical and pairing properties of DNA and RNA, and for probing protein–nucleic acid interactions. In this article, we review research conducted in our laboratory over the past two decades with a focus on crystal‐structure analyses of CNAs and artificial pairing systems. We highlight key insights into issues ranging from conformational distortions as a consequence of modification to the modulation of pairing strength, and RNA affinity by stereoelectronic effects and hydration. Although crystal structures have only been determined for a subset of the large number of modifications that were synthesized and analyzed in the oligonucleotide context to date, they have yielded guiding principles for the design of new analogs with tailor‐made properties, including pairing specificity, nuclease resistance, and cellular uptake. And, perhaps less obviously, crystallographic studies of CNAs and synthetic pairing systems have shed light on fundamental aspects of DNA and RNA structure and function that would not have been disclosed by investigations solely focused on the natural nucleic acids.  相似文献   

15.
Heterogeneous nuclear RNA-protein fibers in chromatin-depleted nuclei   总被引:36,自引:15,他引:21       下载免费PDF全文
The heterogeneous nuclear RNA-protein (hnRNP) fibers in HeLa cell nuclei are visualized by a nuclear subfractionation technique which removes 96% of the chromatin in a single step and 99% in a two-step elution but leaves the bulk of the hnRNA complexed with the remnant nuclear structure or lamina. Both steady-state and newly synthesized (approximately 15-s label) hnRNA are associated with the remnant nuclei to about the same extent. This association does not appear to depend on the presence of chromatin and exists in addition to any possible association of hnRNP with chromatin itself. Electron microscopy of partially purified nuclear hnRNA complexes shows that the hnRNP fibers form a ribonucleoprotein network throughout the nucleus, whose integrity is dependent on the RNA. Autoradiography confirms that hnRNA is a constituent of the fibers. The RNA network visualized in these remnant nuclei may be similar to RNA networks seen in intact cells. The hnRNA molecules appear to be associated with the nuclear lamina, at least in part, by unusual hnRNA sequences. More than half of the recovered poly(A) and double-stranded hnRNA regions remains associated with the nuclear structures or the laminae after digestion with RNase and elution with 0.4 M ammonium sulfate. In contrast, the majority of oligo(A), another ribonuclease resistant segment, is released together with most of the partially digested but still acid-precipitable single- stranded hnRNA and the hnRNP proteins not eluted by the ammonium sulfate alone. These special RNA regions appear to be tightly bound and may serve as points of attachment of the hnRNA to nuclear substructures. It is suggested that hnRNA metabolism does not take place in a soluble nucleoplasmic compartment but on organized structures firmly bound to the nuclear structure.  相似文献   

16.
Using mouse erythroleukaemia cells and different ultrastructural techniques, the morphology was investigated of the nuclear matrix obtained after incubation at 37 degrees C of isolated nuclei. If purified nuclei were heated for 45 min at 37 degrees C, the final matrix exhibited well-recognizable nucleolar remnants, an inner network and a peripheral lamina. Without such incubation only the peripheral lamina was seen surrounding homogeneous, finely granular material. Similar results were obtained with both araldite-embedded and freeze-fractured nuclear matrices, although in the latter case the loose granular material was not evident. Observations of araldite-embedded, heat-treated nuclei revealed clumping of heterochromatin in small, very electron-dense masses with large interchromatin spaces. These ultrastructural aspects were even more striking in freeze-fractured nuclei. Cytochemical matrix analysis by osmium-amine staining for nucleic acids and DNase-gold labelling for DNA localization demonstrated that also matrix residual nucleic acids, mostly RNA, are stabilized by heat exposure of isolated nuclei. The results demonstrate that the morphology of heat-stabilized nuclear matrix is not artefactually affected during the preparation for conventional electron microscopy and suggest a possible involvement of nucleic acids in the heat-induced stabilization of the nuclear matrix.  相似文献   

17.
Residual nuclear structures have previously been isolated from a wide range of eukaryotic organisms. When nuclei are isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and then treated with 1.95 M NaCl and DNase I, sedimentable residual structures are obtained similar in several respects to structures isolated from organisms previously studied. These yeast residual nuclear structures retain less than 7% of nuclear DNA, less than 17% of nuclear RNA and less than 50% of nuclear proteins. Electron microscopy suggests that these structures are derived from the nuclear interior and are composed of a sparse fibrogranular network. Replicating DNA is preferentially bound to these yeast residual nuclear structures, just as it is to residual nuclear structures from other organisms.  相似文献   

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Summary Using mouse erythroleukaemia cells and different ultrastructural techniques, the morphology was investigated of the nuclear matrix obtained after incubation at 37° C of isolated nuclei. If purified nuclei were heated for 45 min at 37° C, the final matrix exhibited well-recognizable nucleolar remnants, an inner network and a peripheral lamina. Without such incubation only the peripheral lamina was seen surrounding homogeneous, finely granular material. Similar results were obtained with both araldite-embedded and freeze-fractured nuclear matrices, although in the latter case the loose granular material was not evident. Observations of araldite-embedded, heat-treated nuclei revealed clumping of heterochromatin in small, very electron-dense masses with large interchromatin spaces. These ultrastructural aspects were even more striking in freeze-fractured nuclei. Cytochemical matrix analysis by osmium-ammine staining for nucleic acids and DNase-gold labelling for DNA localization demonstrated that also matrix residual nucleic acids, mostly RNA, are stabilized by heat exposure of isolated nuclei. The results demonstrate that the morphology of heat-stabilized nuclear matrix is not artefactually affected during the preparation for conventional electron microscopy and suggest a possible involvement of nucleic acids in the heat-induced stabilization of the nuclear matrix.  相似文献   

20.
Recent advances in atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging of nucleic acids include the visualization of DNA and RNA incorporated into devices and patterns, and into structures based on their sequences or sequence recognition. AFM imaging of nuclear structures has contributed to advances in telomere research and to our understanding of nucleosome formation. Highlights of force spectroscopy or pulling of nucleic acids include the use of DNA as a programmable force sensor, and the analysis of RNA flexibility and drug binding to DNA.  相似文献   

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