Abstract: | Previous studies from this laboratory on protein turnover in 3H-labelled L-cell cultures have shown recovery of total 3H at the end of a 3-day experiment to be always significantly in excess of the 3H recovered at the beginning of the experiment. In this study we have critically reviewed a number of possible sources for this error in measuring radioactivity in cell proteins. 3H-labelled proteins, when dissolved in 0.3 M-NaOH and counted for radioactivity in a liquid-scintillation spectrometer, showed losses of 30-40% of the radioactivity; neither external or internal standardization compensated for this loss. Hydrolysis of these proteins with either Pronase or concentrated HCl significantly increased the measured radioactivity. In addition, approx. 5-10% of the cell protein is left on the plastic culture dish when cells are recovered in phosphate-buffered saline. To aggravate this latter loss further, this surface-adherent protein, after pulse labelling, contains proteins of high radioactivity that turn over rapidly and make a major contribution to the accumulating radioactivity in the medium. These combined errors can account for up to 60% of the total radioactivity in the cell culture. Similar analytical errors have been found in studies of other cell cultures. The effect of these analytical errors on estimates of protein turnover in cell cultures is discussed. |