Rapid turnover of non-histone chromosomal proteins in skeletal muscle |
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Authors: | L.R. Kuehl |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biochemistry, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Ut. 84132, USA |
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Abstract: | Incorporation of 3H-leucine into histones and non-histone chromosomal proteins was investigated in liver, a tissue in which proteins generally turn over rapidly, and in muscle, a tissue in which proteins turn over slowly. Incorporation into histones was low in both tissues. Incorporation into non-histone chromosomal proteins which, in liver, proceeded at about the same rate as into soluble cytoplasmic proteins was, in muscle, considerably more rapid than into any other cytoplasmic or nuclear protein fraction investigated. The significance of the relatively high incorporation rate into the non-histone chromosomal proteins in muscle is not known. However, autoradiographic experiments suggest that in muscle all nuclei display a high rate of incorporation into these proteins, and gel electrophoretic experiments indicate that a high rate of turnover is characteristic of many of the proteins comprising this fraction. |
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