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CYTOPLASMIC LABEL FOLLOWING TRITIATED THYMIDINE TREATMENT OF ALLIUM CEPA L. ROOTS : Cytochemical and Electron Microscope Study

Tritiated thymidine routinely labels onion root cytoplasm during most of the cell cycle. One-third of this label could be cytochemically identified as DNA. The balance of the label was not RNA or a lipid, or attributable to labeled impurities in thymidine-(3)H. In electron microscope radioautographs...

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Autor principal: Fussell, Catharine P.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1968
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2107535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5677966
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author Fussell, Catharine P.
author_facet Fussell, Catharine P.
author_sort Fussell, Catharine P.
collection PubMed
description Tritiated thymidine routinely labels onion root cytoplasm during most of the cell cycle. One-third of this label could be cytochemically identified as DNA. The balance of the label was not RNA or a lipid, or attributable to labeled impurities in thymidine-(3)H. In electron microscope radioautographs one-third of the cytoplasmic silver grains was over organelles, presumably mitochondria and plastids. The other two-thirds of the silver grains in electron micrographs was distributed widely, 41% over ground cytoplasm and 10% over cell walls-cell membranes. Snake venom phosphodiesterase (SVDase) extracted a cytoplasmic fraction not degraded by DNase, and did not appear to extract nuclear DNA. The SVDase-extractable fraction may be DNA or a thymidine 5'-phosphoryl group in an ester linkage with another hydroxylic compound. The nature of the nonextractable fraction is considered. Possibilities discussed are: (1) technical problems such as the binding of an acid-labile nuclear DNA in the cytoplasm; (2) non-DNA, such as breakdown products, and thymine compounds other than DNA; (3) DNA, not extractable because of the nature of its binding to other compounds or because it is a "core" resistant to DNase. Until the chemical nature of this nonextractable fraction is known, cytoplasmic label following thymidine-(3)H treatment cannot necessarily be considered DNA, nor the assumption made that thymidine-(3)H exclusively labels DNA.
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spelling pubmed-21075352008-05-01 CYTOPLASMIC LABEL FOLLOWING TRITIATED THYMIDINE TREATMENT OF ALLIUM CEPA L. ROOTS : Cytochemical and Electron Microscope Study Fussell, Catharine P. J Cell Biol Article Tritiated thymidine routinely labels onion root cytoplasm during most of the cell cycle. One-third of this label could be cytochemically identified as DNA. The balance of the label was not RNA or a lipid, or attributable to labeled impurities in thymidine-(3)H. In electron microscope radioautographs one-third of the cytoplasmic silver grains was over organelles, presumably mitochondria and plastids. The other two-thirds of the silver grains in electron micrographs was distributed widely, 41% over ground cytoplasm and 10% over cell walls-cell membranes. Snake venom phosphodiesterase (SVDase) extracted a cytoplasmic fraction not degraded by DNase, and did not appear to extract nuclear DNA. The SVDase-extractable fraction may be DNA or a thymidine 5'-phosphoryl group in an ester linkage with another hydroxylic compound. The nature of the nonextractable fraction is considered. Possibilities discussed are: (1) technical problems such as the binding of an acid-labile nuclear DNA in the cytoplasm; (2) non-DNA, such as breakdown products, and thymine compounds other than DNA; (3) DNA, not extractable because of the nature of its binding to other compounds or because it is a "core" resistant to DNase. Until the chemical nature of this nonextractable fraction is known, cytoplasmic label following thymidine-(3)H treatment cannot necessarily be considered DNA, nor the assumption made that thymidine-(3)H exclusively labels DNA. The Rockefeller University Press 1968-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2107535/ /pubmed/5677966 Text en Copyright © 1968 by The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Fussell, Catharine P.
CYTOPLASMIC LABEL FOLLOWING TRITIATED THYMIDINE TREATMENT OF ALLIUM CEPA L. ROOTS : Cytochemical and Electron Microscope Study
title CYTOPLASMIC LABEL FOLLOWING TRITIATED THYMIDINE TREATMENT OF ALLIUM CEPA L. ROOTS : Cytochemical and Electron Microscope Study
title_full CYTOPLASMIC LABEL FOLLOWING TRITIATED THYMIDINE TREATMENT OF ALLIUM CEPA L. ROOTS : Cytochemical and Electron Microscope Study
title_fullStr CYTOPLASMIC LABEL FOLLOWING TRITIATED THYMIDINE TREATMENT OF ALLIUM CEPA L. ROOTS : Cytochemical and Electron Microscope Study
title_full_unstemmed CYTOPLASMIC LABEL FOLLOWING TRITIATED THYMIDINE TREATMENT OF ALLIUM CEPA L. ROOTS : Cytochemical and Electron Microscope Study
title_short CYTOPLASMIC LABEL FOLLOWING TRITIATED THYMIDINE TREATMENT OF ALLIUM CEPA L. ROOTS : Cytochemical and Electron Microscope Study
title_sort cytoplasmic label following tritiated thymidine treatment of allium cepa l. roots : cytochemical and electron microscope study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2107535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5677966
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