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1.
GSH S-transferases are dimeric enzymes. The subunits in the rat are resolved into six types, designated Yf, Yk, Ya, Yn, Yb and Yc, by discontinuous SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis [Hayes (1986) Biochem. J. 233, 789-798]. The relative electrophoretic mobility of the Ya and Yk subunits is dependent on the amount of cross-linker (NN'-methylenebisacrylamide) in the resolving gel. At low degrees of cross-linking, CBis 0.6% (w/w), the Yk and Ya subunits possess a faster anodal mobility than do the Yf, Yn, Yb and Yc subunits (i.e. order of mobility Yk greater than Ya greater than Yf greater than Yn greater than Yb greater than Yc), whereas at higher degrees of cross-linking, CBis 5.0% (w/w), Yf subunits possess the fastest mobility (i.e. order of mobility Yf greater than Yk greater than or equal to Yn greater than Yb greater than or equal to Ya greater than Yc). Resolving gels that contain low concentrations of cross-linker [CBis 0.6% (w/w)] allow the resolution of a hitherto unrecognized polypeptide that is isolated by S-hexyl-GSH-Sepharose affinity chromatography. This new polypeptide, which we have designated Yb, is normally obscured by the main Yb band in resolving gels that comprise concentrations of cross-linker of at least CBis 1.6% (w/w). The Ya- and Yb-type subunits in guinea pig, mouse, hamster and man were identified by immuno-blotting and their apparent Mr values in different electrophoresis systems were determined. The Ya subunits in all species studied possess a variable cross-linker-dependent mobility during electrophoresis. Since the transferase subunits are currently classified according to their mobilities during SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, it is apparent that the variable electrophoretic behaviour of the Ya and Yk subunits may lead to the mis-identification of enzymes.  相似文献   

2.
The glutathione S-transferases are dimeric enzymes whose subunits can be defined by their mobility during sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis as Yf (Mr 24,500), Yk (Mr 25,000), Ya (Mr 25,500), Yn (Mr 26,500), Yb1 (Mr 27,000), Yb2 (Mr 27,000) and Yc (Mr 28,500) [Hayes (1986) Biochem. J. 233, 789-798]. Antisera were raised against each of these subunits and their specificities assessed by immuno-blotting. The transferases in extrahepatic tissues were purified by using, sequentially, S-hexylglutathione and glutathione affinity chromatography. Immune-blotting was employed to identify individual transferase polypeptides in the enzyme pools from various organs. The immuno-blots showed marked tissue-specific expression of transferase subunits. In contrast with other subunits, the Yk subunit showed poor affinity for S-hexylglutathione-Sepharose 6B in all tissues examined, and subsequent use of glutathione and glutathione affinity chromatography. Immuno-blotting was employed to identify a new cytosolic polypeptide, or polypeptides, immunochemically related to the Yk subunit but with an electrophoretic mobility similar to that of the Yc subunit; high concentrations of the new polypeptide(s) are present in colon, an organ that lacks Yc.  相似文献   

3.
The administration of interferon-alpha/beta to female nude (nu/nu) mice caused significant changes in the levels of the cytosolic hepatic glutathione transferases. Antibodies raised against rat subunits, Ya, Yc, Yb1, Yb2, and Yk, and the subunits of the human transferases, mu (YbYb), lambda (YfYf), and epsilon (B1B1) all reacted with enzymes in the mouse and were used to demonstrate suppression and induction of transferase levels. Western blot analysis followed by semiquantitation by laser scanning showed the Ya, Yb1, Yb2, Yc, Yk, mu, and B1 subunits to be suppressed by 11, 11, 44, 30, 12, 14, and 47%, respectively, by interferon treatment. In contrast to these findings, the Yf subunit was induced 5-7-fold. A concomitant 220% increase was observed in the specific activity of the hepatic cytosol for ethacrynic acid, a substrate for the Yf subunit. Changes in the levels of transferase enzymes in normal and tumor cells may have significant implications when cytotoxic drugs are used in combination with interferons in cancer therapy. The Yf subunit, an enzyme found in human tumors and in placenta (Polidoro, G., Di Mio, C., Del Boccio, G., Zulli, P., and Fererici, G. (1980) Biochem. Pharmacol. 29, 1677-1680) has also been shown to be elevated in hepatic preneoplastic lesions (Kitahara, A., Satoh, K., Nishimura, K., Ishikawa, T., Ruike, K., Sato, K., Tsuda, H., and Ito, N. (1984) Cancer Res. 44, 2698-2703). These data indicate that the Yf subunit represents a potentially important interferon-inducible gene product.  相似文献   

4.
A novel hepatic enzyme, glutathione S-transferase K, is described that, unlike previously characterized transferases, possesses little affinity for S-hexylglutathione-Sepharose 6B but can be isolated because it binds to a glutathione affinity matrix. A purification scheme for this new enzyme was devised, with the use of DEAE-cellulose, S-hexylglutathione-Sepharose 6B, glutathione-Sepharose 6B and hydroxyapatite chromatography. The final hydroxyapatite step results in the elution of three chromatographically interconvertible forms, K1, K2 and K3. The purified protein has an isoelectric point of 6.1 and comprises subunits that are designated Yk (Mr 25,000); during sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, it migrates marginally faster than the Ya subunit but slower than the pulmonary Yf monomer (Mr 24,500). Transferase K displays catalytic, immunochemical and physical properties that are distinct from those of other liver transferases. Tryptic peptide maps suggest that transferase K is a homodimer, or comprises closely homologous subunits. The tryptic fingerprints also demonstrate that, although transferase K is structurally separate from previously described hepatic forms, a limited sequence homology exists between the Yk, Ya and Yc polypeptides. These structural data are in accord with the immunochemical results presented in the accompanying paper [Hayes & Mantle (1986) Biochem. J. 233, 779-788].  相似文献   

5.
(1) The tissue-specific expression of various glutathione-dependent enzymes, including glutathione S-transferase (GST), glutathione peroxidase and glyoxalase I, has been studied in bovine adrenals, brain, heart, kidney, liver, lung and spleen. Of the organs studied, liver was found to possess the greatest GST and glyoxalase I activity, and spleen the greatest glutathione peroxidase activity. The adrenals contained large amounts of these glutathione-dependent enzymes, but significant differences were observed between the cortex and medulla. (2) GST and glyoxalase I activity were isolated by S-hexylglutathione affinity chromatography. Glyoxalase I was found in all the organs examined, but GST exhibited marked tissue-specific expression. (3) The alpha, mu and pi classes of GST (i.e., those that comprise respectively Ya/Yc, Yb/Yn and Yf subunits) were all identified in bovine tissues. However, the Ya and Yc subunits of the alpha class GST were not co-ordinately regulated nor were the Yb and Yn subunits of the mu class GST. (4) Bovine Ya subunits (25.5-25.7 kDa) were detected in the adrenal, liver and kidney, but not in brain, heart, lung or spleen. The Yc subunit (26.4 kDa) was expressed in all those organs which expressed the Ya subunit, but was also found in lung. The mu class Yb (27.0 kDa) and Yn (26.1 kDa) subunits were present in all organs; however, brain, lung and spleen contained significantly more Yn than Yb type subunits. The pi class Yf subunit (24.8 kDa) was detected in large amounts in the adrenals, brain, heart, lung and spleen, but not in kidney or liver. (5) Gradient affinity elution of S-hexylglutathione-Sepharose showed that the bovine proteins that bind to this matrix elute in the order Ya/Yc, Yf, Yb/Yn and glyoxalase I. (6) In conclusion, the present investigation has shown that bovine GST are much more complex than previously supposed; Asaoka (J. Biochem. 95 (1984) 685-696) reported the purification of mu class GST but neither alpha nor pi class GST were isolated.  相似文献   

6.
Six forms of glutathione S-transferase (GST) designated as GST 9.3, GST 7.5, GST 6.6, GST 6.1, GST 5.7 and GST 4.9 have been purified to homogeneity from rat brain. All GST isoenzymes of rat brain are apparent homodimers of one of the three type subunits, Ya, Yb, or Yc. More than 60% of total GST activity of rat brain GST activity is associated with the isoenzymes containing only the Yb type of subunits. In these respects brain GST isoenzymes differ from those of lung and liver. The Ya, Yb, and Yc type subunits of brain GST are immunologically similar to the corresponding subunits of liver and lung GST. The isoelectric points and kinetic properties of the Yb type subunit dimers in brain are strikingly different from those of the Yb type dimers present among liver GST isoenzymes indicating subtle differences between these subunits of brain and liver.  相似文献   

7.
Normal rat liver expresses Ya (Mr 25,500), Yc (Mr 27,500) and Yk (Mr 25,000) Class Alpha glutathione S-transferase (GST) subunits. The Ya-type subunit can be resolved into two separate polypeptides, designated Ya1 and Ya2, by reverse-phase h.p.l.c. In rat livers that possess aflatoxin B1-induced pre-neoplastic nodules, a marked increase is observed in the expression of Ya1, Ya2, Yc and Yk; of these subunits, Ya2 exhibited the greatest increase in concentration. The Ya1 and Ya2 subunits isolated from nodule-bearing livers were cleaved with CNBr, and the purified peptides were subjected to automated amino-acid-sequence analysis. Differences in the primary structures of the two Ya GST subunits were found at positions 31, 34, 107 and 117. These data demonstrate that Ya1 and Ya2 are distinct polypeptides and are the products of separate genes. The amino acid sequences obtained from Ya1 and Ya2 were compared with the cloned cDNAs pGTB 38 [Pickett, Telakowski-Hopkins, Ding, Argenbright & Lu (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 4112-4115] and pGTR 261 [Lai, Li, Weiss, Reddy & Tu (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 5182-5188], which encode rat Ya-type subunits. From these comparisons it appears probable that Ya1 represents the GST subunit encoded by pGTR 261, whereas Ya2 represents the subunit encoded by pGTB 38. It is likely that the over-expression of Ya1 and Ya2 in nodule-bearing livers is of major significance in the acquired resistance of nodules to aflatoxin B1, since previous work [Coles, Meyer, Ketterer, Stanton & Garner (1985) Carcinogenesis 6, 693-697] has shown that the Ya-type GST subunit has high activity towards aflatoxin B1 8,9-epoxide.  相似文献   

8.
H C Lai  G Grove    C P Tu 《Nucleic acids research》1986,14(15):6101-6114
We have isolated a Yb-subunit cDNA clone from a GSH S-transferase (GST) cDNA library made from rat liver polysomal poly(A) RNAs. Sequence analysis of one of these cDNA, pGTR200, revealed an open reading frame of 218 amino acids of Mr = 25,915. The deduced sequence is in agreement with the 19 NH2-terminal residues for GST-A. The sequence of pGTR200 differs from another Yb cDNA, pGTA/C44 by four nucleotides and two amino acids in the coding region, thus revealing sequence microheterogeneity. The cDNA insert in pGTR200 also contains 36 nucleotides in the 5' noncoding region and a complete 3' noncoding region. The Yb subunit cDNA shares very limited homology with those of the Ya or Yc cDNAs, but has relatively higher sequence homology to the placental subunit Yp clone pGP5. The mRNA of pGTR200 is not expressed abundantly in rat hearts and seminal vesicles. Therefore, the GST subunit sequence of pGTR200 probably represents a basic Yb subunit. Genomic DNA hybridization patterns showed a complexity consistent with having a multigene family for Yb subunits. Comparison of the amino acid sequences of the Ya, Yb, Yc, and Yp subunits revealed significant conservation of amino acids (approximately 29%) throughout the coding sequences. These results indicate that the rat GSTs are products of at least four different genes that may constitute a supergene family.  相似文献   

9.
Glutathione S-transferases are a complex family of dimeric proteins that play a dual role in cellular detoxification; they catalyse the first step in the synthesis of mercapturic acids, and they bind potentially harmful non-substrate ligands. Bile acids are quantitatively the major group of ligands encountered by the glutathione S-transferases. The enzymes from rat liver comprise Yk (Mr 25 000), Ya (Mr 25 500), Yn (Mr 26 500), Yb1, Yb2 (both Mr 27 000) and Yc (Mr 28 500) monomers. Although bile acids inhibited the catalytic activity of all transferases studied, the concentration of a particular bile acid required to produce 50% inhibition (I50) varies considerably. A comparison of the I50 values obtained with lithocholate (monohydroxylated), chenodeoxycholate (dihydroxylated) and cholate (trihydroxylated) showed that, in contrast with all other transferase monomers, the Ya subunit possesses a relatively hydrophobic bile-acid-binding site. The I50 values obtained with lithocholate and lithocholate 3-sulphate showed that only the Ya subunit is inhibited more effectively by lithocholate than by its sulphate ester. Other subunits (Yk, Yn, Yb1 and Yb2) were inhibited more by lithocholate 3-sulphate than by lithocholate, indicating the existence of a significant ionic interaction, in the bile-acid-binding domain, between (an) amino acid residue(s) and the steroid ring A. By contrast, increasing the assay pH from 6.0 to 7.5 decreased the inhibitory effect of all bile acids studied, suggesting that there is little significant ionic interaction between transferase subunits and the carboxy group of bile acids. Under alkaline conditions, low concentrations (sub-micellar) of nonsulphated bile acids activated Yb1, Yb2 and Yc subunits but not Yk, Ya and Yn subunits. The diverse effects of the various bile acids studied on transferase activity enables these ligands to be used to help establish the quaternary structure of individual enzymes. Since these inhibitors can discriminate between transferases that appear to be immunochemically identical (e.g. transferases F and L), bile acids can provide information about the subunit composition of forms that cannot otherwise be distinguished.  相似文献   

10.
Expression of glutathione S-transferases in rat brains   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The tissue-specific expression of glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) in rat brains has been studied by protein purification, in vitro translation of brain poly(A) RNAs, and RNA blot hybridization with cDNA clones of the Ya, Yb, and Yc subunit of rat liver GSTs. Four classes of GST subunits are expressed in rat brains at Mr 28,000 (Yc), Mr 27,000 (Yb), Mr 26,300, and Mr 25,000. The Mr 26,3000 species, or Y beta, has an electrophoretic mobility between that of Ya and Yb, similar to the liver Yn subunit(s) reported by Hayes (Hayes, J. D. (1984) Biochem. J. 224, 839-852). RNA blot hybridization of brain poly(A) RNAs with a liver Yb cDNA probe revealed two RNA species of approximately 1300 and approximately 1100 nucleotides. The band at approximately 1300 nucleotides was absent in liver poly(A) RNAs. The Mr 25,000 species, or Y delta, can be immunoprecipitated by antisera against rat heart and rat testis GSTs, but not by antiserum against rat liver GSTs. Therefore, the Y delta subunit may be related to the "Mr 22,000" subunit reported by Tu et al. (Tu, C.-P.D., Weiss, M.J., Li, N., and Reddy, C. C. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 4659-4662). The abundant liver GST subunits, Ya, are not expressed in rat brains as demonstrated by electrophoresis of purified brain GSTs and a lack of isomerase activity toward the Ya-specific substrate, delta 5-androstene-3,17-dione. This is apparently because of the absence of Ya mRNA expression prior to RNA processing. The data on the preferential expression of Yc subunits in rat brains, together with the differential phenobarbital inducibility of the Ya subunit(s) in rat liver reported by Pickett et al. (Pickett, C. B., Donohue, A. M., Lu, A. Y. H., and Hales, B. F. (1982) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 215, 539-543), suggest that the Ya and Yc genes for rat GSTs are two functionally distinct gene families even though they share 68% DNA sequence homology. The expression of multiple GSTs in rat brains suggests that GSTs may be involved in physiological processes other than xenobiotics metabolism.  相似文献   

11.
mRNA levels of glutathione S-transferase (GST) subunits 3 and 4 were measured with a specific cDNA probe in adult rat hepatocytes maintained either in conventional culture or in coculture with rat liver epithelial cells. Four media conditions were used, i.e. with or without fetal calf serum (FCS) and with nicotinamide or dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO). When FCS was present in the culture medium, GST subunit 3 and 4 mRNAs were expressed at a level close to that found in freshly isolated hepatocytes during the whole culture period both in conventional culture and in coculture. All other culture conditions resulted in an increase of GST 3 and 4 mRNA levels. After exposure to phenobarbital an increase in GST 3 and 4 mRNA levels was demonstrated in both culture systems. Comparison with previous findings on the expression of GST subunits 1, 2 and 7 in the same culture conditions indicates that the different classes of GST are regulated independently.  相似文献   

12.
Subunits of multiple molecular forms of dimeric glutathione S-transferase in rat liver cytosol were analyzed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (isoelectric focusing/sodium dodecyl sulfate-electrophoresis) followed by staining with Coomassie blue dye. The five subunits, Ya, Yb, Yb', Yc, and Yp (Mr's 26,500, 27,500, 27,500, 28,500, and 26,000, respectively) of seven molecular forms, A2, AC, C2, B2, BL, L2, and GST-P, were identified by comparison of molecular weights and pI values with those of purified molecular forms and by immunoadsorption of the molecular forms in the cytosol as well as those synthesized in vitro using antibodies against the seven forms. Yp is the subunit of placental glutathione S-transferase, GST-P (YpYp), which is markedly increased in carcinogen-treated rat livers [A. Kitahara et al. (1984) Cancer Res. 44, 2698-2703; K. Satoh et al. (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 82, 3964-3968]. Microheterogeneity was detectable within Yb, Yb', and Yp subunits, the different forms, termed Yb1, Yb2, Yb'1, Yb'2, and Yp1, Yp2, being similar in size but differing by approx. 0.3 pI unit within each subunit. These microheterogeneous forms were also detectable in the polypeptides translated in vitro in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate translation system from liver poly(A)-containing RNAs, suggesting that they are translatable from distinct mRNAs.  相似文献   

13.
A novel method for the rapid purification of glutathione S-transferases (GST) from tissue and cell culture samples is reported. A high-performance glutathione affinity column was used and produced results comparable to those obtained with classical agarose affinity columns. Experiments with purified rat liver GST standards resulted in 87% recovery of total activity. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) of the affinity-purified GST was identical to the GST standard and revealed three major protein bands, corresponding to the Ya, Yb, and Yc subunits. A fourth protein band (relative molecular mass 25 000), migrating slightly faster than the Ya subunit, was present in both the standard and eluted GST samples. This polypeptide was tentatively identified as the Yk subunit. Successful purification from rat liver and Walker 256 rat carcinoma cell cytosols was also performed. Recovery of total GST enzymatic activity from Walker cell and rat liver cytosol was 49 and 58%, respectively. SDS-PAGE of these samples indicated a high degree of purity. This methodology requires less than 1 h and can be performed using small quantities of tissue. These features make this technique applicable to analysis of a broad range of biological applications including human biopsy material for GST content.  相似文献   

14.
The subunit composition of adult and fetal rat liver glutathione S-transferase was investigated by affinity chromatography followed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecylsulphate. Adult livers contained four major GSH S-T subunits. A previously unidentified subunit was detected in fetal livers. This subunit(s), which differed from that found in rat placenta, had a molecular weight of about 25,500 daltons, gave two bands of pI 8.0 and 8.5 on isoelectric focussing, and reacted on "Western blots" with antibodies raised against the major GSH S-T subunits of adult liver. Densitometric measurements suggest that the newly detected transferase subunit accounted for as much as 26% of GSH S-T in fetal livers.  相似文献   

15.
We have isolated from a lambda gt10 cDNA library a clone lambda GTH4 which encodes a human liver glutathione S-transferase Hb subunit, designated as subunit 4. Expression of this cDNA in E. coli and subsequent purification and immunoblotting analysis provided a definitive assignment of a structure and function relationship. RNA blot hybridization with human liver poly(A) RNA revealed a single band of approximately 1200 nucleotides, comparable in size to the rat brain Yb3 mRNA. Divergence analysis of amino acid replacement sites in subunit 4 relative to the four rat Yb subunits revealed that it is most closely related to the brain-specific Yb3 subunit. This conclusion is further substantiated by the nucleotide sequence homology between lambda GTH4 and the Yb3 cDNA in their 3' untranslated region. In situ chromosome mapping has located this glutathione S-transferase gene in the region of p31 on chromosome 1. Results from many laboratories, including ours, indicate that the human glutathione S-transferases are encoded by a gene superfamily which is located on at least two different chromosomes.  相似文献   

16.
Hepatic glutathione S-transferase isoenzyme content has been investigated in both sexes of three inbred strains of mice (DBA/2, C3H/He, C57BL6). A polypeptide (Mr 24,800), which is immunologically related to Yf purified from rat lung, was found to be expressed as a major form in all male mouse livers but represented only a minor enzyme form in female mouse liver. Glutathione S-transferases comprising subunits with molecular masses of 25,800 (Ya) or 26,400 (Yb) were present in males and females of the three strains under investigation. Cytosolic isoenzymes from all strains and sexes were purified to apparent homogeneity and no significant inter-strain differences in the properties of the individual forms were observed. In addition, no differences were detected in the microsomal glutathione S-transferase content of the different strains or sexes.  相似文献   

17.
Testis cytosol is shown to contain the Yb2Yb2 -homodimer glutathione S-transferase D in addition to the previously described glutathione S-transferases A ( Yb1Yb1 ) and C ( Yb1Yb2 ). Treatment of rats with phenobarbital induces the level of glutathione S-transferase D in testis with no increase in the activities of glutathione S-transferases A and C. This result indicates a specific induction of the Yb2 subunit in testis, in contrast with the situation in rat liver, where phenobarbital specifically induces the Yb1 subunit.  相似文献   

18.
1. The hepatic glutathione S-transferase (GST) isoenzymes were isolated and characterized from salmon, sea trout and rainbow trout. 2. In all three species the predominant GST expressed comprised subunits of Mr 24,800. These subunits each co-migrated with the rat pi-class Yf polypeptide during SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. 3. Western blotting experiments demonstrated immunochemical cross-reactivity between the major salmonid and the rat pi-class GSTs. 4. The salmon GST of subunit Mr 24,800 was digested with cyanogen bromide and the peptides, once purified by reverse-phase HPLC, were subjected to automated amino acid sequencing. 5. Over the region sequenced, the salmon GST possessed about 65% homology with the rat and human pi-class GST.  相似文献   

19.
We have isolated a glutathione S-transferase Yb1 subunit cDNA from a lambda gt11 cDNA collection constructed from rat testis poly(A) RNA enriched for glutathione S-transferase mRNA activities. This Yb1 cDNA, designated pGTR201, is identical to our liver Yb1 cDNA clone pGTR200 except for a shorter 5'-untranslated sequence. Active glutathione S-transferase is expressed from this Yb1 cDNA driven by the tac promoter on the plasmid construct pGTR201-KK. The expressed glutathione S-transferase protein begins with the third codon (Met) of the cDNA, and is missing the N-terminal proline of rat liver glutathione S-transferase 3-3. Therefore, our Escherichia coli expressed glutathione S-transferase protein represents a variant form of glutathione S-transferase 3-3 (Yb1Yb1), designated GST 3-3(-1). The expressed Yb1 subunits are assembled into a dimer as purified from sonicated E. coli crude extracts. In the absence of dithiothreitol three active isomers can be resolved by ion-exchange chromatography. The pure protein has an extinction coefficient of 9.21 x 10(4) M-1 cm-1 at 280 nm or E0.1% 280 = 1.78 and a pI at 8.65. It has a substrate specificity pattern similar to that of the authentic glutathione S-transferase 3-3. The GST 3-3(-1) has a KM of 202 microM for reduced GSH and of 36 microM for 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene. The turnover number for this conjugation reaction is 57 s-1. Results of kinetic studies of this reaction with GST 3-3(-1) are consistent with a sequential substrate binding mechanism. We conclude that the first amino acid proline of glutathione S-transferase 3-3 is not essential for enzyme activities.  相似文献   

20.
We have previously shown that a 30 kDa DNA-binding protein isolated from rat cell nuclei exhibits the chemical and immunological properties of glutathione S-transferase Yb subunits [Bennett, Spector & Yeoman (1986) J. Cell Biol. 102, 600-609]. It was of interest, therefore, to determine whether Yb subunits isolated from rat liver nuclei would return to nuclear fractions upon reintroduction to cell cytoplasms via red-blood-cell-mediated fusion. Labelled Yb subunits were associated with nuclear fractions 60 min after cell fusion. The microinjected protein remained associated with the nuclei for 18 h and was not extractable with low-salt washes. In addition, injected Yb subunits were found to equally distribute between extractable (56%) and residual (44%) nuclear fractions. These experiments demonstrate that glutathione S-transferase Yb subunits isolated from nuclei rapidly translocate to nuclei upon reintroduction into cell cytoplasms.  相似文献   

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