Selective inhibition of DNA synthesis in macronuclear fragments in Paramecium aurelia exconjugants and its reversal during macronuclear regeneration |
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Authors: | Dr. James D. Berger |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Zoology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana;(2) Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver 8, B. C., Canada |
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Abstract: | In Paramecium exconjugants very rapid DNA synthesis takes place in the developing macronuclear anlagen, while DNA synthesis is suppressed in macronuclear fragments. The rate of DNA synthesis in fragments (as a percentage of the rate in anlagen or macronuclei in the same cells) decreases by about 40% during each successive cell cycle over at least the first five cell cycles after conjugation, even though macronuclear anlagen are fully mature by the end of the second cell cycle. — Suppression of DNA synthesis in macronuclear fragments is reversible. If macronuclear anlagen are removed at fission, a very high rate of DNA synthesis resumes in macronuclear fragments after a two-hour lag. The total rate of synthesis in the ensemble of macronuclear fragments in cells without anlagen is greater than that in anlagen in control cells. Thus, suppression of DNA synthesis in macronuclear fragments is not the result of any stable differentiation or irreversible change in the fragments but is the result of, and dependent on, the presence of macronuclear anlagen. — The results of injection of cytoplasm from vegetative cells into normal exeonjugants suggest that normal macronuclei produce an inhibitor which selectively suppresses DNA synthesis in macronuclear fragments. In control cells the relative rate of DNA synthesis in fragments ranged from 40 to 70% of that in anlagen in the same cells, while in injected cells the relative rate of incorporation of DNA precursors was suppressed to as little as 7%. The mean level of incorporation into fragments in injected cells was significantly lower than that in controls, suggesting that the injected cytoplasm contained an inhibitor.Contribution 822, Zoology Department, Indiana University. Supported in part by contract COO-235-66 of the USAEC and by grant No. Gm 15410-05 of the USPHS to T. M. Sonneborn.This paper is a portion of a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the equirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. |
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