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Protein synthesis in resting and growth-stimulated human peripheral lymphocytes : Evidence for regulation by a non-messenger RNA
Authors:Herbert L Cooper  Richard Braverman
Abstract:Stimulation of lymphocyte growth is accompanied by an early increase in the rate of protein synthesis. This increase is dependent upon the flow of inactive free ribosomes into polysomes, which is limited by a rate-controlling step at initiation 2]. Addition of actinomycin D (actD) to lymphocytes caused a gradual reduction in protein synthesis in resting cells, but rapidly inhibited both the elevation of protein synthesis and the activation of free ribosomes which normally follow exposure to mitogens. Since actD does not affect protein synthesis in enucleated lymphocytes 4], the effect in intact cells must be mediated by a nuclear event, which available data indicate is RNA synthesis. ActD prevented the accumulation of 80S initiation complexes which normally occurs in resting lymphocytes treated with pactamycin and cycloheximide, showing that its locus of action was at some point in initiation. The decline in rate of protein synthesis began without detectable lag when resting lymphocytes were treated with actD. However, after growth stimulation, a delay of ca 50 min occurred before the protein synthetic rate declined in response to actD. These observations agree with the hypothesis that the concentration of some moderately short-lived RNA is rate-limiting for protein synthesis in resting lymphocytes, and that an early event in growth stimulation is a rise in the amount of this component to levels which are no longer rate-limiting. This permits an increased flow of ribosomes into polysomes and a consequent rise in protein synthesis. Available evidence indicates that the regulatory RNA is neither mRNA nor rRNA, but may either be one of the small cytoplasmic RNAs whose function is unknown, or tRNAimet.
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