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1.
The nuclear matrix contains a group of residual non-histone proteins which remain structurally organized after extensive extraction of isolated nuclei with a high salt buffer, nucleases and a non-ionic detergent. Electron microscopic examination shows that the nuclear matrix is composed of a pore-complex lamina, an intranuclear network and residual nucleoli. In CHO cells biochemical analyses performed by one-dimensional SDS-PAGE show three major nuclear matrix polypeptides with molecular weights between 60 and 70 kDa. Polyclonal antibodies produced against these polypeptides were used to determine their nuclear distribution. Using immunoblotting, these proteins were found in whole nuclei, nuclear matrix, and in the intranuclear network but not in the pore-complex lamina. In order to determine the relationship between these structural proteins and the organization of the nucleus, the proteins were localized in situ. Ultrastructural detection was carried out by immunogold staining of thin sections of Lowicryl K4M-embedded cells. In interphase nuclei all condensed chromatin clumps were labelled. The nucleolus and the interchromatin granules were never immunogold-stained. During mitosis, the label was found to be associated with the chromosomes. This study shows that unlike the lamins, these 60-70 kDa nuclear matrix proteins are associated with the condensed chromatin throughout the cell cycle.  相似文献   

2.
Summary We have directly compared two independently published methods for isolating operationally defined nuclear matrices by studying EM ultrastructure, protein composition and distribution of replicating DNA. Nuclear matrices prepared by extraction with 2 M NaCI consisted of fibrous pore complex lamina, residual fibrillar and granular components of nucleoli and interchromatin granules, and an extensive anastomosing internal fibrous network. These matrices were enriched in high molecular weight nonhistone proteins but were virtually devoid of histones. Consistent with previously published data, newly-replicated DNA was resistant to this high salt extraction. Nuclear matrices prepared by extraction of nuclei with 25 mM lithium 3,5-diiodosalicylate, LIS, also contained fibrous pore complex lamina, but lacked morphologically distinct residual nucleoli and were markedly depleted in internal structure. The reduced amounts and complexity of proteins associated with the LIS matrix were consistent with the ultrastructural data. Moreover, much less newly-replicated DNA was recovered in LIS matrices. The data show that LIS dissociates nuclear ultrastructure and extracts both protein and DNA in proportion to the concentration used, regardless of whether nuclei or high salt nuclear matrices are used as starting material. While the data suggest that LIS may not necessarily be an optimal reagent for preparing nuclear matrices containing internal structural elements from all tissue sources, it may be useful for selectively solubilizing and analyzing components of the nuclear matrix.Abbreviations EM electron microscopy - HS high salt, 2 M NaCl - LIS lithium 3,5-diiodosalicylate - DEPC diethyl pyrocarbonate - PMSF phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride - SBTI soybean trypsin inhibitor - VRC vanadium ribonucleoside complex - PBS phosphate buffered saline - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, Type A and Type B structures were isolated as described in Experimental Procedures by methods A and B, respectively  相似文献   

3.
When rat liver nuclei are treated with the sulfhydryl cross-linking reagent sodium tetrathionate (NaTT) prior to nuclease treatment and extraction with 1.6 M NaCl, residual nucleoli and an extensive non-chromatin intranuclear network remain associated with the nuclear envelope. Subsequent treatment of this structure with 1 M NaCl containing 20 mM dithiothreitol (DTT) solubilizes the intranuclear material, while the nuclear envelope remains structurally intact. We have isolated and partially characterized a major polypeptide of the disulfide-stabilized internal nuclear matrix. The polypeptide, which has an apparent molecular mass 38 kD and isoelectric point 5.3, has been localized to the nucleolus of rat liver nuclei by indirect immunofluorescence using a specific polyclonal chicken antiserum. Based on its molecular mass, isoelectric point, intracellular localization and amino acid composition, the 38 kD polypeptide appears to be analogous to the nucleolar phosphoprotein B23 described by Prestayko et al. (Biochemistry 13 (1974) 1945) [20]. Immunologically related polypeptides have likewise been localized to the nucleoli of both hamster and human tissue culture cell lines as well as the cellular slime mold Physarum polycephalum. By immunoblotting, a single 38 kD polypeptide is recognized by the antiserum in rat, mouse, hamster and human cell lines. The antiserum has been utilized to investigate the oligomeric structure of the 38 kD polypeptide and the nature of its association with the rat liver nuclear matrix. By introducing varying numbers of disulfide bonds, we have found that the 38 kD polypeptide becomes incorporated into the internal nuclear matrix in a two-step process. Soluble disulfide-bonded homodimers of the polypeptide are first formed and then are rendered salt-insoluble by more extensive disulfide cross-linking.  相似文献   

4.
Chromatin-depleted nuclei (CDN) were prepared from Friend erythroleukemia cell nuclei by partial digestion with DNase I and extraction of the chromatin by 2 mM EDTA as described in the preceding paper (Long and Ochs, 1983. Biol. Cell 48, 99-108). These structures contained dense networks of matrix fibrils surrounded by distinct laminae but no morphologically distinct residual nucleoli. CDN disrupted by gentle shearing or 1 microgram/ml RNase were fractionated into laminae and matrix fibrils by differential centrifugation. Protein composition of the lamina fraction was dominated by two prominent lamina proteins that were not detectable in the matrix fraction. Mild RNase treatment led to a conversion of the fibrous network to a particulate morphology while mild shearing resulted in an apparently unaltered fibril fraction. The matrix fibril fractions contained hnRNP proteins and the snRNAs. These results suggest that EDTA-prepared CDN may provide a system for studying snRNP-hnRNP interactions and hnRNP processing that is less complex than intact nuclei.  相似文献   

5.
Estrogen has been shown to affect ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) nerve cell nucleoli in ovariectomized rats, by causing an increase in the number of electron-dense aggregates associated with nucleoli. In order to characterize these nucleolus-associated structures and other nuclear components, we examined the ultrastructure of ventromedial hypothalamic nucleoli and nuclei revealed by enzyme digestions (pepsin, RNase and DNase) in resinless thin sections. Digestion by pepsin did not cause obvious alterations in the morphology of the nucleolus or its related structures. Pepsin treatment followed by RNase, however, reduced the density of the nucleolus, while that of the nucleolus-associated structure and other related structures remained unchanged. Conversely pepsin treatment followed by DNase, reduced the density of nucleolus-associated and other chromatin structures, but had no effect on the density of the nucleolus. Pepsin treatment followed by RNase and then DNase treatment, reduced the density of the nucleolus and nucleolus-associated structures. A residual nucleolus and nucleolus-associated structure remained after this treatment. Stereo viewing of resinless sections shows that the nucleolus, its associated structures, and other related structures, are associated with fine filaments that may comprise the nuclear matrix. The nucleolus-associated structure containing DNA may direct RNA synthesis at an increased rate in estrogen-treated hypothalamic cells.  相似文献   

6.
Engelhardt M 《Chromosoma》1999,108(1):64-71
Rat liver nuclei have been studied by transmission electron microscopy after resuspension in a phosphate-buffered salt solution containing SO2− 4 as the quantitatively dominant anion. Owing to the high solubility of chromatin in the presence of SO2− 4 instead of Cl at isotonicity, nuclei are depleted for chromatin by DNase I digestion in this buffer, eliminating the need for high-salt extraction. This shows that at least 75% of the nuclear pore complexes are associated with fibrogranular structures, which ramify as a network throughout the nucleus, interconnecting the nuclear lamina, interchromatin granule clusters and nucleoli. Perichromatin granules are located in this material proximal to the nuclear pore complexes. Most of the chromatin is removed without major impact on the network, but below a level of 25% residual chromatin there is a considerable reduction of this material, and only about 15% of the connections to the nuclear pore complexes are resistant to digestion with DNase I or streptodornase A and B. The percentage of nuclear pore complexes connected to the network is further reduced by salt extraction and RNase treatment. These results suggest that DNA is an integral part of the network, which presumably plays a role in nucleo-cytoplasmic transport of RNA and protein. Received: 1 September 1998; in revised form: 17 December 1998 / Accepted: 17 December 1998  相似文献   

7.
Membrane-depleted nuclei from Ehrlich ascites tumor (EAT) cells isolated at low ionic strength in the presence of EDTA exhibit highly decondensed chromatin fibers and a loss of morphologically identifiable nucleoli. Treatment of these nuclei with nucleases and 2 M NaCl followed by low-speed centrifugation permitted the facile isolation of the nuclear lamina layer. Under the same conditions, but after heat-shock treatment of the living cells, the chromatin appears in a more condensed state, the nucleoli are well-defined, and the nuclear lamina layer was destabilized in concert with the appearance of an internal nuclear matrix and nucleolar skeleton. Furthermore, we also found both an increase in the protein mass as well as the appearance of a relatively large number of new proteins in this fraction, which are phosphorylated. The major proteins of the nuclear lamina, the lamins, and the residual vimentin remained insoluble. These heat-shock-induced changes were also accompanied by a dephosphorylation of lamins A and C but not of lamin B.  相似文献   

8.
Immunofluorescent analysis has shown that autoimmune sera M-222 and M-260 are bound to interphase nuclei and mitotic chromosomes of the pig embryo kidney cell culture. The fluorescent stain is diffuse in nuclei and forms a thin fluorescent area around each nucleolus, whereas the nucleolar cores are unstained. The periphery of each mitotic chromosome is stained distinctly. After removal of histones and DNA by the cell treatment with 2 M NaCl and DNase I, the Hoechst 33258 staining of nuclei and chromosomes disappears completely, whereas the pattern of staining with antibodies is not changed as compared with normal cells. Electron microscopy revealed in interphase nuclei after such treatment only lamina, residual nucleoli, and the intranuclear matrix network, and antibodies are bound just to these elements. Molecular mass of proteins bound to these antibodies was determined by immunoblotting. Serum M-260 contained antibodies to a single 65 kDa polypeptide, whereas antibodies to two polypeptides of 47 and 65 kDa were found in M-222. After chromatin removal and revealing nuclear protein matrix, M-222 binds only to 65 kDa polypeptides. Thus, peripheral chromosomal material is involved in transfer of the nuclear matrix polypeptide to daughter nuclei during mitosis.  相似文献   

9.
Core filaments of the nuclear matrix   总被引:48,自引:18,他引:30       下载免费PDF全文
The nuclear matrix is concealed by a much larger mass of chromatin, which can be removed selectively by digesting nuclei with DNase I followed by elution of chromatin with 0.25 M ammonium sulfate. This mild procedure removes chromatin almost completely and preserves nuclear matrix morphology. The complete nuclear matrix consists of a nuclear lamina with an interior matrix composed of thick, polymorphic fibers and large masses that resemble remnant nucleoli. Further extraction of the nuclear matrices of HeLa or MCF-7 cells with 2 M sodium chloride uncovered a network of core filaments. A few dark masses remained enmeshed in the filament network and may be remnants of the nuclear matrix thick fibers and nucleoli. The highly branched core filaments had diameters of 9 and 13 nm measured relative to the intermediate filaments. They may serve as the core structure around which the matrix is constructed. The core filaments retained 70% of nuclear RNA. This RNA consisted both of ribosomal RNA precursors and of very high molecular weight hnRNA with a modal size of 20 kb. Treatment with RNase A removed the core filaments. When 2 M sodium chloride was used directly to remove chromatin after DNase I digestion without a preceding 0.25 M ammonium sulfate extraction, the core filaments were not revealed. Instead, the nuclear interior was filled with amorphous masses that may cover the filaments. This reflected a requirement for a stepwise increase in ionic strength because gradual addition of sodium chloride to a final concentration of 2 M without an 0.25 M ammonium sulfate extraction uncovered core filaments.  相似文献   

10.
Topo IIα is considered an important constituent of the nuclear matrix, serving as a fastener of DNA loops to the underlying filamentous scaffolding network. To further define a mechanism of drug resistance to topo II poisons, we studied the quantity of topo IIα associated with the nuclear matrix in drug-resistant SMR16 and parental cells in the presence and absence of VP-16. Nuclear matrices were prepared from nuclei isolated in EDTA buffer, followed by nuclease digestion with DNase II in the absence of RNase treatment and extraction with 2 M NaCl. Whole-mount spreading of residual structures permits, by means of isoform-specific antibody and colloidal-gold secondary antibodies, an estimate of the amount of topo IIα in individual nuclear matrices. There are significant variations in topo IIα amounts between individual nuclear matrices due to the cell cycle distribution. The parental cell line contained eight to ten times more nuclear matrix–associated topo IIα than the resistant cell line matrices. Nuclear matrix–associated topo IIα from wild-type and resistant cell lines correlated well with the immunofluorescent staining of the enzyme in nuclei of intact cells. The amount of DNA associated with residual nuclear structures was five times greater in the resistant cell line. This quantity of DNA was not proportional to the quantity of topo IIα in the same matrix; in fact they were inversely related. In situ whole-mount nuclear matrix preparations were obtained from cells grown on grids and confirmed the results from labeling of isolated residual structures. J. Cell. Biochem. 67:112–130, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
A residual protein matrix has been prepared from avian erythroblast nuclei by extensive extraction with salines and detergent and subsequent digestion with high concentrations of RNase and DNase. Ultrastructural examination reveals considerable internal structure, the most prominent feature being the remains of the nucleoli embedded in a network of fibres of fairly uniform diameter of 50 Å. The proteins which make up this structure have been examined by two-dimensional electrophoresis and are shown to consist of a characteristic set of about 30, mainly acidic components, including four prominent species of 43 000, 52 000, 66 000 and 68 000 molecular weight (MW). In parallel preparations of the nuclear matrix digested with DNase alone, much of the nuclear RNA is found associated with the residual structure, including globin-coding sequences. These results correlate well with the ultrastructural appearance of DNase-digested matrix preparations which show that superimposed on the 50 Å fibrous network is a 200–300 Å granular component, the combined fibrillo-granular structure resembling the interchromatin RNP previously identified in situ. However, the proteins of the DNase-digested matrix seen by two-dimensional electrophoresis are indistinguishable from the proteins of matrix preparations digested with both DNase and RNase. Furthermore, two-dimensional comparison between the proteins of the DNase-digested matrix and purified 40S nuclear RNP particles shows that the bulk of the proteins found associated with nuclear RNA in vitro are extracted during matrix preparation, and only two, with MWs of 43 000 and 73 000, remain. The latter species co-migrates with the poly(A)-binding protein.  相似文献   

12.
Nuclear proteins : III. The fibrillar nature of the nuclear matrix   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
The nuclear matrix of mouse liver nuclei was examined after extraction of the chromatin with high salt, deoxyribonuclease and Triton X-100. The residual nuclear matrix is composed of a nuclear pore-lamina complex, fibrillar nucleoli, and intranuclear matrix. Whole mount electron microscopy shows that a portion of the nuclear matrix is composed of 20–30 Å protein fibers which we call matrixin. The fibers may associate to form larger 100–300 Å fibers. When mouse testicular cells were used, intact synaptonemal complexes and the sex vesicle were intimately associated with the matrix and we suggest these structures may be composed of matrixin. SDS gel electrophoresis of the matrix shows three major polypeptides of 65 000, 67 000 and 68 000 D. Several observations suggest DNA is attached to the matrix at many sites throughout the nucleus. The matrix may play a role in the arrangement of chromatin into the chromomeres of meiotic and mitotic chromosomes.  相似文献   

13.
When rat liver nuclei are isolated in the presence of the irreversible sulfhydryl-blocking reagent iodoacetamide, digested with DNase I and RNase A, and extracted with 1.6 M NaCl, nuclear envelope (NE) spheres depleted of intranuclear material, as analysed by thin-section electron microscopy, are obtained. Two-dimensional isoelectric focusing (IEF)/SDS-PAGE and non-equilibrium pH gradient electrophoresis (NEPHGE)/SDS-PAGE reveal that the predominant polypeptides are lamins A, B and C. Nuclei isolated in the absence of sulfhydryl blocking reagents yield salt- and nuclease-resistant structures which contain sparse but demonstrable intranuclear material. A number of non-histone polypeptides are seen in addition to the lamins. Nuclei treated with the sulfhydryl cross-linking reagent sodium tetrathionate (NaTT) yield, after exposure to nucleases and 1.6 M NaCl, nuclear matrix-like structures containing an extensive intranuclear network and components of the nucleolus in addition to the NE. Increased amounts of the non-lamin, non-histone polypeptides are recovered with these structures. Subsequent treatment of these NaTT-cross-linked structures with reducing agents in 1.0 M NaCl selectively solubilizes the intranuclear components but leaves the nuclear envelope apparently intact. The lamins remain sedimentable and are virtually absent from the soluble (intranuclear) material. Instead, the major solubilized polypeptides are (a) 68 and 63 kD polypeptides which migrate in the vicinity of lamins B and C, respectively, but are distinguishable from the lamins by immunoblotting and by uni-dimensional peptide mapping; (b) a series of basic 60-70 kD polypeptides (pI greater than 8.0) which are not recognized by anti-lamin antisera; (c) an acidic (pI 5.3) 38 kD polypeptide; and (d) a number of high molecular mass (greater than 100 kD) polypeptides. These observations not only suggest a convenient method for fractionating matrix structures from rat liver nuclei into biochemically and morphologically discrete components, but also identify a subset of major non-lamin, non-histone nuclear polypeptides (comprising approx. 20% of the total nuclear protein) whose intermolecular interactions can be reversibly stabilized apparently by intermolecular disulfide bond formation by NaTT.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Histone-depleted nuclei were prepared by high-salt extraction of interphase HeLa cell nuclei. A large amount of the nuclear DNA remained associated with a rapidly sedimenting residual nuclear structure including cytoplasmic (intermediate filament) and nuclear (matrix and lamina) proteins. Electron microscopy allowed detection in the insoluble structure of a residual nuclear envelope, nucleolar residues, and an intranuclear network whose correspondence with components of in situ fixed nuclei is discussed. Using three-dimensional electron microscopy, it is further demonstrated that the salt-insoluble structure remaining after histone depletion in 2 M NaCl is highly ordered. This is of the utmost importance when considering the roles reportedly ascribed to this structure in nuclear functions.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Summary Polyclonal antibodies have been produced which react with a nuclear protein having a molecular weight of 107kD and a pl of 8.7–8.8 (designated p107). This protein is shown to be a component of the residual ribonucleoprotein (RNP) network of the nuclear matrix. P107 localized exclusively to the nuclear interior but not within nucleolar or chromatin domains. We have taken advantage of this unique probe to examine whether the RNP network of the isolated nuclear matrix has a physical counterpart in situ. We show that RNA, p107, divalent cations and the 28 kD Sm antigen of U-snRNPs are components of in situ macromolecular assemblies. While the morphology and intranuclear distribution of these assemblies are insensitive to the removal of chromatin, they are markedly altered by degradation of RNA. Digestion in situ of RNA in the presence of EDTA followed by extraction with high ionic strength buffers solubilized the components of these assemblies. Electron microscopic and immunobiochemical data are presented which support the concept that the residual RNP network of the nuclear matrix is an isolate of a pre-existing structure, and that perturbations in this internal network can be created by RNA degradation, depletion of essential metal ions and proteolysis.Abbreviations CRLM polyclonal chicken antibody raised against rat liver nuclear matrix - Sm monoclonal antibody specific for the 28 kd protein antigen of U1, U2, U4, U5 and U6 snRNPs - hnRNP ribonucleoprotein particles containing hnRNA - snRNP ribonucleoprotein particles containing snRNA - PBS phosphate buffered saline - PMSF phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - VRC vanadium ribonucleoside complex - BSA bovine serum albumin - DMSO dimethylsulfoxide - HS high salt buffer - LS low salt buffer  相似文献   

18.
When the nucleus is stripped of most DNA, RNA, and soluble proteins, a structure remains that has been referred to as the nuclear matrix, which acts as a framework to determine the higher order of chromatin organization. However, there is always uncertainty as to whether or not the nuclear matrix, isolated in vitro, could really represent a skeleton of the nucleus in vivo. In fact, the only nuclear framework of which the existence is universally accepted is the nuclear lamina, a continuous thin layer that underlies the inner nuclear membrane and is mainly composed of three related proteins: lamins A, B, and C. Nevertheless, a number of recent investigations performed on different cell types have suggested that nuclear lamins are also present within the nucleoplasm and could be important constituents of the nuclear matrix. In most cell types investigated, the nuclear matrix does not spontaneously resist the extraction steps, but must rather be stabilized before the application of extracting agents. In this investigation, by immunochemical and morphological analysis, we studied the effect of stabilization with different divalent cations (Zn(2+), Cu(2+), Cd(2+)) on the distribution of lamin A and B1 in the nuclear matrix obtained from K562 human erythroleukemia cells. In intact cells, antibodies to both lamin A and B1 mainly stained the nuclear periphery, although some immunoreactivity was detected in the nuclear interior. The fluorescent lamin A pattern detected in Cu(2+)- and Cd(2+)-stabilized nuclei was markedly modified, whereas Zn(2+)-incubated nuclei showed an unaltered pattern of lamin A distribution. By contrast, the distribution of lamin B1 in isolated nuclei was not modified by the stabilizing cations. When chromatin was removed by nuclease digestion and extraction with solutions of high ionic strength, a previously masked immunoreactivity for lamin A, but not for lamin B1, became evident in the internal part of the residual structures representing the nuclear matrix. Our results indicate that when metal ions are used as stabilizing agents for the recovery of the nuclear matrix, the distribution of both lamin A and lamin B1 in the final structures, corresponds to the pattern we have very recently reported using different extraction procedures. This observation strengthen the concept that intranuclear lamins may act as structural components of the nuclear matrix.  相似文献   

19.
A nuclear framework structure termed the nuclear matrix has been isolated and characterized. This matrix forms the major residual structure of isolated nuclei and consists largely of protein with smaller amounts of RNA, DNA, carbohydrate, and phospholipid. The nuclear matrix can be further resolved by combined treatment with DNase and RNase. The remaining nuclear protein structure, after extraction of 90 percent of the nuclear protein, 99.9 percent of the DNA, and 98 percent of the RNA and phospholipid, is termed the nuclear protein matrix. Electron microscopy of this final nuclear protein matrix reveals an interior framework structure composed of residual nucleolar structures associated with a granular and fibrous internal matrix structure. The internal matrix framework is derived from the interchromatinic structures of the nucleus, and is connected to a surrounding residual nuclear envelope layer containing residual nuclear pore complex structures. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-acrylamide gel electrophoresis of the nuclear matrix proteins demonstrates three major polypeptide fractions, P-1, P-2, and P-3, with average molecular weights of approximately 69,000, 66,000 and 62,000, as well as several minor polypeptides which migrate at approximately 50,000 and at higher molecular weights (>100,000). Polypeptides with molecular weights identical to those of P-1, P-2 and P-3 are also components of isolated nuclear envelopes and nucleoli, whereas isolated chromatin contains no detectable matrix polypeptides. This suggests that the major matrix polypeptides are localized in specific structural regions of the nucleus, i.e., nuclear envelope, nucleoli, and interchromatinic structures. The presence of cytochrome oxidase activity in the isolated nuclear matrix indicates that at least some integral proteins of the nuclear membrane are associated with the matrix.  相似文献   

20.
Using mouse erythroleukemia cells we performed a comprehensive morphological and biochemical study of the nuclear matrix obtained after exposure of isolated nuclei to 37 degrees C or from cells heat shocked in vivo at 43 or 45 degrees C. At the ultrastructural level it was possible to see that in the absence of a 37 degrees C incubation of purified nuclei, the final matrix lacked well-defined nucleolar remnants but a peripheral lamina was clearly visible, as well as a sparse fibrogranular network which was located at the periphery of the structures. On the contrary, after a 37 degrees C nuclear incubation, very electron-dense nucleolar remnants were observed along with an abundant meshwork dispersed throughout the interior of the structures. When intact cells were heat shocked in vivo, electron-dense residual nucleoli were present only when isolated nuclei had been exposed to 37 degrees C in vitro, whereas without such an incubation, they were not as easily distinguishable and appeared less electron-dense. In the latter case the inner network was more evenly distributed. After purified nuclei were incubated at 37 degrees C for 45 min, the high salt and DNase I resistant fraction retained about 18% of the nuclear protein whereas if the heating was omitted protein recovery dropped to 6%. An increase in the recovery of intact structures in the matrix fraction was the main reason for the higher protein recovery. Heating nuclei in vitro further increased the amount of nuclear protein present in the matrix fraction even if intact cells had been heat shocked in vivo. No major qualitative differences were seen when the polypeptide pattern of the various types of nuclear matrices was analyzed on one-dimensional polyacrylamide gels and this finding was further supported by Western blot analysis with a monoclonal antibody to lamins A and C. These results show that heating mainly stabilizes the nucleolar remnants of the matrix and to a lesser extent the inner network, but the morphology of the final structures is different depending on whether the stabilization is performed in vivo or in vitro.  相似文献   

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