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Cerebral ribosomal protein phosphorylation in experimental hyperphenylalaninaemia.
Authors:S Roberts and  B S Morelos
Abstract:Investigations were carried out on the effects of phenylalanine loading on ribosomal protein phosphorylation in cerebral cortices of infant rats. Administration of L-phenylalanine intraperitoneally, in doses of 1 or 2 mg/g body wt., resulted within 30 min in a significant decrease in incorporation of radioactivity from intracisternally administered 32P]Pi into constitutive ribosomal proteins of the cerebral 40S subunit. This phenomenon was not accompanied by significant variations in 32P uptake into the cerebral cytosol. Incorporation of radioactivity into ribosomal proteins of the cerebral 60S subunit exhibited only minor variations under these circumstances. Alterations in the phosphorylation state of cerebral 40S ribosomal proteins induced by phenylalanine loading involved principally the S6 protein, which exists in multiple states of phosphorylation. The proportions of the more highly phosphorylated congeners of this protein were markedly decreased, as detected by two-dimensional electrophoretograms and autoradiographs of the cerebral 40S ribosomal proteins. Phenylalanine loading also altered the relative extent of phosphorylation of the S6 protein in cerebral polyribosomes and monoribosomes. In control animals, the specific radioactivity of 40S proteins in cerebral polyribosomes was five to ten times that of 40S proteins in the monoribosome population. At 1 h after phenylalanine administration, the specific radioactivities of 40S proteins in the two ribosome populations tended to approach equality. These alterations in ribosomal protein phosphorylation were accompanied by a decrease in the proportion of polyribosomes in purified ribosome preparations isolated from cerebral cortices of phenylalanine-treated infant rats. In animals given the higher dose of phenylalanine (2 mg/g body wt.), subsequent administration of a mixture of seven neutral amino acids, which resulted in partial recovery of polyribosomes, also tended to reverse the changes in ribosomal protein phosphorylation. Variations in the activities of ribonuclease enzymes in the cerebral cytosol were also observed under these conditions. Administration of phenylalanine increased the activities of cerebral ribonucleases, whereas subsequent treatment with the amino acid mixture partly reversed this effect. The results suggest that alterations in cerebral ribosomal protein phosphorylation, ribosome aggregation and ribosome function are interrelated in experimental hyperphenylalaninaemia.
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