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1.
Among the early events of induced differentiation of murine erythroleukemia cells that we studied was the variations of cell distribution in the cell cycle as a function of the time of induction. Flow-cytofluorimetry measurements of DNA content and BrdU incorporation allowed for a precise determination of the variations of the cell cycle parameters. Cells underwent a transient arrest in both G1 and G2 + M between 6 to 16 h of induction. The progression of the cells through S phase seems not to be affected during this period. After this time cells escaped from G1 and reentered the S phase. We described previously [S. Khochbin et al. (1988) J. Mol. Biol. 200, 55-64], that p53 decreased continuously during the induction of MELC and remained at a steady-state level after 18 to 20 h of induction. In order to look for a possible redistribution of the protein along the cell cycle during the induction process, we measured the accumulation of the protein along the cell cycle. In noninduced cells there were four steps in the accumulation of the protein throughout the cell cycle: the amount of p53 was constant during G1 and it increased as cells progressed through S phase, which is characterized by an increased accumulation at the G1/S transition and a more moderate accumulation during progression through the rest of the S phase. A constant level in G2/M, approximately twice that obtained in G1, was achieved. There was no change in this distribution that correlated with the various modifications of the cell cycle in induced cells. It seems then, that p53 is associated neither with the progression of the cells in the S phase nor with the resumption of the DNA synthesis after the G1 block.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract The Dictyostelium vegetative cell cycle is characterized by a short mitotic period followed immediately by a short S-phase (less than 30 min) and a long and variable G2 phase. The cell cycle continues during differentiation despite a decrease in cell mass: DNA replication and mitosis occur early in development and also at the tipped aggregate stage. Cells that are in mitosis, S-phase or early G2, when starved differentiate into prestalk cells and cells that are in the middle of G2 differentiate into prespore cells. We postulate that there is a restriction point late in the G2 phase, about 1–2 h before mitosis, where the cells can be arrested either by starvation and the initiation of development, by growing into stationary phase, or by prolonged incubation at low temperature. During development, this block persists to the tipped aggregate stage, where it is specifically released in prespore cells, and these cells then go through one more round of cell division. Genes encoding components of the cell cycle machinery have recently been isolated and attemps to specifically block the cell cycle by reverse genetics to study the effects on differentiation have been initiated.  相似文献   

3.
Summary A method based on BrdU incorporation for analyzing in detail the kinetics of the cell cycle is described. The S phase has been subdivided into five subphases, each recognizable by their BrdU incorporation pattern at metaphase. The method can be useful for the study of abnormal cell cycles, and may have particular application in mutagenesis studies concerning the various subphases of the S phase, without using synchronization techniques. An application of the method is described, showing that -irradiation, during the course of the S phase, leads to a lack of cells which were in early S phase at the time of irradiation. This finding can be related either to a higher lethality at this stage of the cell cycle or to a delay in completion of DNA replication after irradiation.Hoider of a C.E.C. scholarship  相似文献   

4.
Cultured Friend murine erythroleukemia cells (Friend cells) are induced to undergo erythroid differentiation when grown in the presence of dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) and other compounds. The effects of unifilar substitution of bromouracil (BU) for thymidine in the DNA (BU-DNA) of Friend cells were examined. Cells were grown in the presence of 5-bromodeoxy-uridine (BrdU) for one generation, then centrifuged and resuspended in medium containing DMSO without BrdU. These cells exhibited a delay in the appearance of heme-producing, benzidine-reative (B+) cells and a decreased rate of cell proliferation in comparison to the control not containing BU-DNA. A transient inhibition of entry into S phase was observed when control cells or cells containing BU-DNA were grown in the presence of DMSO) for 10 to 20 hours. This transient inhibition was increased in the BrdU culture. Thus BU-substitution in Friend cells alters other cellular functions in addition to erythroid differentiation. The rate of increase in the percent of cells committed to differentiate (those forming B+ colonies in plasma clots) was similar in the BrdU and control cultures until 40 to 50 hours. After this time, a delay in the appearance of committed cells was observed in the BrdU culture. The effect of BrdU on the appearance of B+ cells was more pronounced and occurred earlier than its effect on the rate of commitment. Therefore, the delay in the appearance of B+ cells in the BrdU culture was due primarily to perturbation of post-commitment events such as the accumulation of hemoglobin. We also examined the effect on growth and differentiation after BrdU was incorporated during different intervals of S phase in cells synchronized by centrifugal elutriation or by double thymidine block and hydroxyurea treatment. The delay in the appearance of B+ cells and inhibition of cell proliferation were only observed when BrdU was incorporated in the first half of S phase. BrdU (10 muM) had no effect on growth or differentiation when present during late S or G1 and G2. These results, using two very different methods to achieve cell synchrony, indicate that the effects of BrdU on growth and differentiation described above are due to its incorporation into DNA sequences replicating during early S.  相似文献   

5.
The mammary cancer cell line CAMA-1 synchronized at the G1/S boundary by thymidine block or at the G1/M boundary by nocodazole was used to evaluate 1) the sensitivity of a specific cell cycle phase or phases to 17 beta-estradiol (E2), 2) the effect of E2 on cell cycle kinetics, and 3) the resultant E2 effect on cell proliferation. In synchronized G1/S cells, E2-induced 3H-thymidine uptake, which indicated a newly formed S population, was observed only when E2 was added during, but not after, thymidine synchronization. Synchronized G2/M cells, enriched by Percoll gradient centrifugation to approximately 90% mitotic cells, responded to E2 added immediately following selection; the total E2-treated population traversed the cycle faster and reached S phase approximately 4 hr earlier than cells not exposed to E2. When E2 was added during the last hour of synchronization (ie, at late G2 or G2/M), or for 1 hr during mitotic cell enrichment, a mixed response occurred: a small portion had an accelerated G1 exit, while the majority of cells behaved the same as controls not incubated with E2. When E2 addition was delayed until 2 hr, 7 hr, or 12 hr following cell selection, to allow many early G1 phase cells to miss E2 exposure, the response to E2 was again mixed. When E2 was added during the 16 hr of nocodazole synchronization, when cells were largely at S or possibly at early G2, it inhibited entry into S phase. The E2-induced increase or decrease of S phase cells in the nocodazole experiments also showed corresponding changes in mitotic index and cell number. These results showed that the early G1 phase and possibly the G2/M phase are sensitive to E2 stimulation, late G1, G1/S, or G2 are refractory; the E2 stimualtion of cell proliferation is due primarily to an increased proportion of G1 cells that traverse the cell cycle and a shortened G1 period, E2 does not facilitate faster cell division; and estrogen-induced cell proliferation or G1/S transition occurs only when very early G1 phase cells are exposed to estrogen. These results are consistent with the constant transition probability hypothesis, that is, E2 alters the probability of cells entering into DNA synthesis without significantly affecting the duration of other cell cycle phases. Results from this study provide new information for further studies aimed at elucidating E2-modulated G1 events related to tumor growth.  相似文献   

6.
Flow cytometric analysis of X-ray sensitivity in ataxia telangiectasia   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Flow cytometric analysis of 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation during DNA synthesis was used to characterize the effects of X-rays on cell-cycle kinetics in the DNA-repair deficiency disease ataxia telangiectasia (AT). Cultured fibroblasts from homozygotes (at/at), heterozygotes (at/+) and normal controls (+/+) were either: (1) irradiated, cultured, then pulsed with BrdU and harvested, or (2) pulsed with BrdU, irradiated, cultured and then harvested. Cells were then fixed and stained with both a fluoresceinated monoclonal antibody against BrdU to identify S-phase cells and with propidium diiodide to measure total DNA content. Irradiation of +/+ and at/+ cells induced a similar, transient G2/M arrest detectable within 8 h, which subsequently delayed by 6-8 h the passage of cells into G1 and depleted early S phase. In contrast, at/at cells failed to arrest in G2/M phase and entered the next cell cycle without pausing to repair radiation-induced damage. X-Rays also blocked entry of +/+ G1 cells into S phase, subsequently reducing the total S-phase population. This effect was not observed in at/at cells. These cell-cycle responses to radiation may be of diagnostic use and ultimately may help explain the basic defect in AT.  相似文献   

7.
The regulation of cell proliferation is central to tissue morphogenesis during the development of multicellular organisms. Furthermore, loss of control of cell proliferation underlies the pathology of diseases like cancer. As such there is great need to be able to investigate cell proliferation and quantitate the proportion of cells in each phase of the cell cycle. It is also of vital importance to indistinguishably identify cells that are replicating their DNA within a larger population. Since a cell′s decision to proliferate is made in the G1 phase immediately before initiating DNA synthesis and progressing through the rest of the cell cycle, detection of DNA synthesis at this stage allows for an unambiguous determination of the status of growth regulation in cell culture experiments.DNA content in cells can be readily quantitated by flow cytometry of cells stained with propidium iodide, a fluorescent DNA intercalating dye. Similarly, active DNA synthesis can be quantitated by culturing cells in the presence of radioactive thymidine, harvesting the cells, and measuring the incorporation of radioactivity into an acid insoluble fraction. We have considerable expertise with cell cycle analysis and recommend a different approach. We Investigate cell proliferation using bromodeoxyuridine/fluorodeoxyuridine (abbreviated simply as BrdU) staining that detects the incorporation of these thymine analogs into recently synthesized DNA. Labeling and staining cells with BrdU, combined with total DNA staining by propidium iodide and analysis by flow cytometry1 offers the most accurate measure of cells in the various stages of the cell cycle. It is our preferred method because it combines the detection of active DNA synthesis, through antibody based staining of BrdU, with total DNA content from propidium iodide. This allows for the clear separation of cells in G1 from early S phase, or late S phase from G2/M. Furthermore, this approach can be utilized to investigate the effects of many different cell stimuli and pharmacologic agents on the regulation of progression through these different cell cycle phases.In this report we describe methods for labeling and staining cultured cells, as well as their analysis by flow cytometry. We also include experimental examples of how this method can be used to measure the effects of growth inhibiting signals from cytokines such as TGF-β1, and proliferative inhibitors such as the cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor, p27KIP1. We also include an alternate protocol that allows for the analysis of cell cycle position in a sub-population of cells within a larger culture5. In this case, we demonstrate how to detect a cell cycle arrest in cells transfected with the retinoblastoma gene even when greatly outnumbered by untransfected cells in the same culture. These examples illustrate the many ways that DNA staining and flow cytometry can be utilized and adapted to investigate fundamental questions of mammalian cell cycle control.  相似文献   

8.
Adult neurogenesis is studied in vivo using thymidine analogues such as bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) to label DNA synthesis during the S phase of the cell cycle. However, BrdU may also label DNA synthesis events not directly related to cell proliferation, such as DNA repair and/or abortive reentry into the cell cycle, which can occur as part of an apoptotic process in postmitotic neurons. In this study, we used three well-characterized models of injury-induced neuronal apoptosis and the combined visualization of cell birth (BrdU labeling) and death (Tdt-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling) to investigate the specificity of BrdU incorporation in the adult mouse brain in vivo. We present evidence that BrdU is not significantly incorporated during DNA repair and that labeling is not detected in vulnerable or dying postmitotic neurons, even when a high dose of BrdU is directly infused into the brain. These findings have important implications for a controversy surrounding adult neurogenesis: the connection between cell cycle reactivation and apoptosis of terminally differentiated neurons.  相似文献   

9.
alphaA- and alphaB-crystallins are small heat shock proteins and molecular chaperones that are known to prevent non-specific aggregation of denaturing proteins. Recent work indicates that alphaA-/- lens epithelial cells grow at a slower rate than wild-type cells, and cultured alphaB-/- cells demonstrate increased hyperproliferation and genomic instability, suggesting that these proteins may exert a direct effect on the cell cycle kinetics, and influence cell proliferation. However, the cell cycle parameters of alphaA/alphaBKO (double knockout) cells have not been analyzed. Here we investigate the cell cycle kinetics of synchronized mouse lens epithelial cultures derived from wild-type and alphaA/alphaB double knockout (alphaA/alphaBKO) mice using BrdU labeling of proliferating cells, and flow cytometric analysis. We also provide data on the changing pattern of expression of HSP25, a small heat shock protein in alphaA/alphaBKO and wild-type cells during the cell cycle. Using serum starvation to synchronize cells in the quiescent G0 phase, and restimulation with serum followed by BrdU labeling and flow cytometry, the data indicated that as compared to wild-type cells, a <50% smaller fraction of the alphaA/alphaBKO cells entered the DNA synthetic S phase of the cell cycle. Furthermore, there was a delay in cell cycle transit through S phase in alphaA/alphaBKO cells, suggesting that although capable of entering S phase, the alphaA/alphaBKO cells are blocked in G1 phase, and are delayed in their cell cycle progression. Immunoblot analysis with antibodies to the small heat shock protein HSP25 indicated that although HSP25 increased in G1 phase of wild-type cells, and remained elevated on further progression through the cell cycle, HSP25 accumulation was delayed to S phase in alphaA/alphaBKO cells. These data can be interpreted to indicate that mouse lens epithelial cell progression through the cell cycle is significantly affected by expression of alphaA and alphaB-crystallin.  相似文献   

10.
Trypanosomatids are typified by uniquely configured mitochondrial DNA--the kinetoplast. The replication timing of kinetoplast DNA (kDNA) is closely linked to nuclear S phase, but nuclear and kinetoplast compartments display staggered timing of segregation, post-replication. Kinetoplast division is completed before nuclear division in Trypanosoma species while nuclear division is completed first in Crithidia species. Leishmania donovani is the causative agent of visceral leishmaniasis, a form of leishmanial infection that is often fatal. Cell cycle related studies in Leishmania are hampered by difficulties in synchronizing these cells. This report examines the replication/segregation pattern and morphology of the kinetoplast in L. donovani with the aim of determining if these traits can be used to assign cell cycle stage to individual cells. By labeling replicating cells with bromodeoxyuridine after synchronization with hydroxyurea, we find that although both nuclear and kDNA initiate replication in early S phase, nuclear division precedes kinetoplast segregation in 80% of the cells. The kinetoplast is roundish/short rod-like in G1 and in early to mid-S phase, but prominently elongated/bilobed in late S phase and early G2/M. These morphological traits and segregation pattern of the kinetoplast can be used as a marker for cell cycle stage in a population of asynchronously growing L. donovani promastigotes, in place of cell synchronization procedures or instead of using antibody staining for cell cycle stage marker proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Ras-dependent cell cycle commitment during G2 phase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Hitomi M  Stacey DW 《FEBS letters》2001,490(3):123-131
Synchronization used to study cell cycle progression may change the characteristics of rapidly proliferating cells. By combining time-lapse, quantitative fluorescent microscopy and microinjection, we have established a method to analyze the cell cycle progression of individual cells without synchronization. This new approach revealed that rapidly growing NIH3T3 cells make a Ras-dependent commitment for completion of the next cell cycle while they are in G2 phase of the preceding cell cycle. Thus, Ras activity during G2 phase induces cyclin D1 expression. This expression continues through the next G1 phase even in the absence of Ras activity, and drives cells into S phase.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract. The effects of extreme hypoxia on cell cycle progression were studied by simultaneous determination of DNA and bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) contents of individual cells. V79-379A cells were pulse-labelled with BrdU (1 μM, 20 min, 37°C) and then incubated for up to 12 hr in BrdU-free medium under either aerated or extremely hypoxic conditions. After the incubation interval (0-12 hr), the cells were trypsinized and fixed in 50% EtOH. Propidium iodide and a fluorescein-labelled monoclonal antibody to BrdU were then used to quantify DNA content and incorporated BrdU, respectively. Measurements in individual cells were made by simultaneous detection of green and red fluorescence upon excitation at 488 nm using flow cytometry. Bivariate analysis revealed progression of BrdU-labelled cells in aerated cultures out of S phase, into G2 and cell division, with halving of mean fluorescence, and back into S phase by approximately 9 hr after the BrdU pulse. Hypoxia immediately arrested cells in all phases of the cell cycle. Both the DNA distribution and the bivariate profile of cells that were fixed from 2 to 12 hr after induction of hypoxia were identical to the 0 hr controls. the percent of cells with green fluorescence in a mid-S phase window remained 100% and the mean fluorescence of these cells remained at control (0 hr) levels. This indicates that, under hypoxic conditions, cells were moving neither into nor out of S phase. Cultures that had been hypoxic for 12 hr exhibited an increasing rate of BrdU uptake with time after re-aeration. Re-aerated cells were able to complete or initiate DNA synthesis, but their rates of progression through the cell cycle were markedly reduced. A large fraction of cells appeared unable to divide up to 12 hr following release from hypoxia.  相似文献   

13.
The relationship between replication of simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA and the various periods of the host-cell cycle was investigated in synchronized CV(1) cells. Cells synchronized through a double excess thymidine procedure were infected with SV40 at the beginning or the middle of S, or in G(2). The first viral progeny DNA molecules were in all instances detected approximately 20 h after release from the thymidine block, independent of the time of infection. The length of the early, prereplicative phase of the virus growth cycle therefore depended upon the period of the cell cycle at which the cells were infected. Infection with SV40 was also performed on cells obtained in early G(1) through selective detachment of cells in metaphase. As long as the cells were in G(1) at the time of infection, the first viral progeny DNA molecules were detected during the S period immediately following, whereas if infection took place once the cells had entered S, no progeny DNA molecule could be detected until the S period of the next cell cycle. These results suggest that the infected cell has to pass through a critical stage situated in late G(1) or early S before SV40 DNA replication can eventually be initiated.  相似文献   

14.
Oxidized LDL (o-LDL) is toxic to a variety of cultured cells. Preliminary results suggested that susceptibility is enhanced by cell proliferation. As a step toward determining the mechanism of cytotoxicity, we chose to identify the cell cycle phase(s) during which exposure of cultured human fibroblasts to o-LDL leads to death. Cytochalasin B, which blocks cell migration and proliferation, and irradiation, which prevents mitosis but not migration, both blocked cytotoxicity. Colchicine, which arrests cells in mitosis but does not inhibit DNA synthesis, did not block cytotoxicity. Treatment of cells with hydroxyurea, which blocks cells prior to S phase, prevented cell death. Addition of o-LDL to cells immediately after S phase allowed mitosis without death. The above results coupled with results using cells synchronized by three different means indicate that cell death is selective for proliferating cells and occurs after exposure to o-LDL during S phase. Understanding the mechanism of o-LDL-induced death may have implications for tissue damage in vivo in the numerous instances of pathology in which oxidized lipoproteins or lipids are present.  相似文献   

15.
In a previous study the epidermal cell kinetics of hairless mice were investigated with bivariate DNA/anti-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) flow cytometry of isolated basal cells after BrdU pulse labelling. The results confirmed our previous observations of two kinetically distinct sub-populations in the G2 phase. However, the results also showed that almost all BrdU-positive cells had left S phase 6-12 h after pulse labelling, contradicting our previous assumption of a distinct, slowly cycling, major sub-population in S phase. The latter study was based on an experiment combining continuous tritiated thymidine [( 3H]TdR) labelling and cell sorting. The purpose of the present study was to use a mathematical model to analyse epidermal cell kinetics by simulating bivariate DNA/BrdU data in order to get more details about the kinetic organization and cell cycle parameter values. We also wanted to re-evaluate our assumption of slowly cycling cells in S phase. The mathematical model shows a good fit to the experimental BrdU data initiated either at 08.00 hours or 20.00 hours. Simultaneously, it was also possible to obtain a good fit to our previous continuous labelling data without including a sub-population of slowly cycling cells in S phase. This was achieved by improving the way in which the continuous [3H]TdR labelling was simulated. The presence of two distinct subpopulations in G2 phase was confirmed and a similar kinetic organization with rapidly and slowly cycling cells in G1 phase is suggested. The sizes of the slowly cycling fractions in G1 and G2 showed the same distinct circadian dependency. The model analysis indicates that a small fraction of BrdU labelled cells (3-5%) was arrested in G2 phase due to BrdU toxicity. This is insignificant compared with the total number of labelled cells and has a negligible effect on the average cell cycle data. However, it comprises 1/3 to 1/2 of the BrdU positive G2 cells after the pulse labelled cells have been distributed among the cell cycle compartments.  相似文献   

16.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the cell cycle perturbation of cultured C6 rat glioma cells induced by 1-(4-amino-2-methyl-5-pyrimidyl)methyl-3-(2-chloroethyl)3-nitrosourea hydrochloride (ACNU) using simultaneous flow cytometric measurements of DNA and bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) content. A new graphic computer program permitted the quantification of cell density in hexagonal subareas and allowed the fraction of BrdU-labeled cells with mid-S phase DNA content (FLS) to be defined in a narrow window. The cell kinetic parameters such as cell cycle time (Tc) and S phase time (Ts) were estimated from a manually plotted FLS curve at 18 and 6 hr, respectively. The major effect of ACNU on the cell cycle was an accumulation of the cells in the G2M phase 12 to 24 hr posttreatment when compared to G2M traverse of untreated cells. For the two-dimensional analysis, cells were labeled with BrdU and then treated with ACNU, or treated with ACNU and then labeled with BrdU. It was concluded that the cells in the S and G2M phases at the time of ACNU administration progressed to mitosis but that the G1 phase cells accumulated in the subsequent G2M phase. Two-dimensional FCM analysis using BrdU provided a useful tool in studying cell cycle perturbation.  相似文献   

17.
We have optimised an indirect immunoperoxidase technique demonstrating bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation into dividing cells for cerebellar tissue sections of four-day-old rats injected with this marker. This permits confident identification of granule-cell precursors engaged in DNA synthesis in the external granular layer of the developing cerebellum. Preservation of BrdU immunoreactivity is attained using methanol/acetic acid fixation and different pretreatments before immunostaining, while unlabeled nuclei can be recognized clearly after Feulgen or hematoxylin counterstaining. We established conditions to ensure satisfactory BrdU uptake without affecting cell-cycle progression during the postlabeling time period. The dose of BrdU employed provides saturation S-phase labeling from at least 1 h after BrdU delivery. Various kinetic parameters and phase durations have been determined in experiments involving a single injection or cumulative labeling sequences, and the cycle time was calculated based on two models of generative behavior: steady-state and exponential growth. The working hypothesis of steadystate kinetics can be adopted successfully if the existence of neuroblasts with different proliferation rates is taken into account.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of extreme hypoxia on cell cycle progression were studied by simultaneous determination of DNA and bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) contents of individual cells. V79-379A cells were pulse-labelled with BrdU (1 microM, 20 min, 37 degrees C) and then incubated for up to 12 hr in BrdU-free medium under either aerated or extremely hypoxic conditions. After the incubation interval (0-12 hr), the cells were trypsinized and fixed in 50% EtOH. Propidium iodide and a fluorescein-labelled monoclonal antibody to BrdU were then used to quantify DNA content and incorporated BrdU, respectively. Measurements in individual cells were made by simultaneous detection of green and red fluorescence upon excitation at 488 nm using flow cytometry. Bivariate analysis revealed progression of BrdU-labelled cells in aerated cultures out of S phase, into G2 and cell division, with halving of mean fluorescence, and back into S phase by approximately 9 hr after the BrdU pulse. Hypoxia immediately arrested cells in all phases of the cell cycle. Both the DNA distribution and the bivariate profile of cells that were fixed from 2 to 12 hr after induction of hypoxia were identical to the 0 hr controls. The percent of cells with green fluorescence in a mid-S phase window remained 100% and the mean fluorescence of these cells remained at control (0 hr) levels. This indicates that, under hypoxic conditions, cells were moving neither into nor out of S phase. Cultures that had been hypoxic for 12 hr exhibited an increasing rate of BrdU uptake with time after re-aeration. Re-aerated cells were able to complete or initiate DNA synthesis, but their rates of progression through the cell cycle were markedly reduced. A large fraction of cells appeared unable to divide up to 12 hr following release from hypoxia.  相似文献   

19.
When the growth of serum-arrested GC-7 cells, a clone from African green monkey kidney, was induced by the addition of 10% calf serum, they began to enter S phase after 15-16 h. When stimulated cells were cultured in the presence of 0.6 micrograms/ml of cytochalasin D, the entrance into S phase was inhibited. Treatment of cells with cytochalasin D during the period earlier than 8 h or later than 11 h after the serum stimulation showed no or little inhibitory effect on the entrance of cells into S phase. Inhibition of the entrance into S phase was observed only when stimulated cells were treated with cytochalasin D during the periods including 9-10 h after stimulation. A rapid increase in protein synthesis occurred 9-12 h after the serum stimulation and was inhibited in the presence of cytochalasin D. These and other results suggested that in the course of the prereplicative process from Go through S phase only the stage around 9-10 h after the start of the cell cycle was sensitive to cytochalasin D and that the block of the cycle was correlated with the inhibition of protein synthesis at this stage.  相似文献   

20.
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