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Studies on the Growth in Culture of Plant Cells: XV. UPTAKE AND UTILIZATION OF URIDINE DURING THE GROWTH OF ACER PSEUDOPLATANUS L. CELLS IN SUSPENSION CULTURE
Authors:COX, B. J.   TURNOCK, G.   STREET, H. E.
Abstract:[2-14C]-uridine is rapidly taken up by sycamore cells in suspensionculture. A proportion of the radioactivity enters RNA withoutmeasurable delay, whilst the remainder equilibrates with a largepool of phosphorylated compounds, the major radioactive componentof which is 5'-UMP. Both the uracil and cytosine residues ofRNA receive label from [14C]-uridine and, when the cells aresupplied with high concentrations of uridine, these bases arederived almost exclusively from the nucleoside. [14C]-uridine is incorporated into RNA at all stages of thegrowth cycle of batch cultures; its continuing incorporation,when the total RNA content of the cells is rapidly decreasing,indicates a high rate of turnover of the total RNA. Long-termlabelling experiments also indicate turnover of RNA during thephase of active cell division and suggest that a large proportionof the degradation products are not re-utilized for RNA synthesis. Sycamore cells degrade [2-14C]-uridine with release of 14CO2.The proportion degraded increases from 25 per cent at an externaluridine concentration of 10–6M to 75 per cent at 10–3M. Despite this, nucleic acids are the only macromolecules thatreceive a significant amount of radioactivity from [2-14]C-uridine.
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