Comparison of the multiple deoxyribonucleic acid-dependent ribonucleic acid polymerase forms of whole rat liver and a minimal-deviation rat hepatoma cell line.
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ABSTRACT: To investigate the possibility that the pattern of multiple DNA-dependent RNA polymerases of an animal cell exerts a controlling influence on its nature, the activities of these enzymes were compared in differentiated rat liver and in a rapidly growing minimal-deviation rat hepatoma cell line by using established techniques of enzyme extraction, separation and determination. Relative to the DNA content of the tissues, RNA polymerase activities of forms AI, AII and B were approx. ninefold, twofold and twofold higher respectively in the cell line than in the liver. Tests indicated that these results could not be explained by differences in extraction efficiency or by the presence of unbound inhibitors or stimulators of polymerase activity in the final enzyme preparations. New forms of the enzyme were not detected in either tissue. The significance of these findings with respect to the possible role of multiple RNA polymerases in the control of cellular activities is discussed.
SUBMITTER: Chesterton CJ
PROVIDER: S-EPMC1178425 | biostudies-other | 1972 Feb
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
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