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Identification of albumin-synthesizing polysomes from mouse liver and a mouse hepatoma cell line.
Authors:P C Brown  J Papaconstantinou
Institution:1. The University of Tennessee-Oak Ridge Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37830 USA
Abstract:Albumin-synthesizing polysomes from mouse liver and mouse hepatoma cells in in tissue culture have been localized on sucrose gradients with 125I-labeled antimouse serum albumin used as a marker. Competition studies show that the 125I-labeled antibody binds specifically to albumin-synthesizing polysomes from both tissues. The 125I-labeled polysomes from liver and hepatoma cells have identical sedimentation properties on sucrose gradients, which indicates that the polysomes range in size from 9–14 ribosomes. This is comparable in size to polysomes from rat liver and Morris hepatoma. One significant difference between these albumin-synthesizing polysomes is that those extracted from hepatoma cells bind 70% less antibody than equivalent amounts of polysomes from liver cells. Since the level of albumin synthesis in the hepatoma cells is comparable to the level of albumin synthesis in vivo, this difference in antibody-binding capacity is not likely to be due to differences in polysomal content, but appears to be a characteristic difference between hepatoma and normal mouse liver cells.
Keywords:MSA  mouse serum albumin  SDS  sodium dodecyl sulfate
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