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A small nuclear precursor of messenger RNA in the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum
Authors:R A Firtel  H F Lodish
Institution:Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass. 02139, U.S.A.
Abstract:Previous work (Firtel et al., 1972) showed that messenger RNA from the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum, like that from mammalian cells, contains a sequence of about 100 adenylic acid residues at the 3′ end. We show here that Dictyostelium nuclei, labeled under a variety of conditions, do not contain material analogous to the large nuclear heterogeneous RNA found in mammalian cells. Rather, the majority of pulse-labeled nuclear RNA that is not a precursor of ribosomal RNA does contain at least one sequence of polyadenylic acid; this RNA, with an average molecular weight of 500,000, appears to be only 20% larger than cytoplasmic messenger RNA.Pulse-labeling experiments show that the nuclear poly(A)-containing RNA is a material precursor of messenger RNA. Whereas previous work showed that over 90% of messenger RNA sequences are transcribed from non-reiterated DNA, we show here that about 25% of nuclear poly (A)-containing RNA is transcribed from reiterated DNA sequences and only 75% from single-copy DNA. We present evidence that a large fraction of the nuclear poly(A)-containing RNA contains, at the 5′ end, a sequence of about 300 nucleotides that is transcribed from repetitive DNA, and which is lost before transport of messenger RNA into the cytoplasm.Based on these and other results, we present a model of arrangement of repetitive and single-copy DNA sequences in the Dictyostelium chromosome.
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