Disappearance of radioactivity from the various ribonucleic acid pools and acid-soluble fractions of mouse liver and kidney after a single injection of labelled orotic acid. The effect of castration.
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ABSTRACT: 1. An attempt was made to study the rate of synthesis as well as the distribution of RNA in the various cellular fractions in the livers and kidneys of normal and castrated mice. 2. The tissue was fractionated by the procedure of Blobel & Potter (1967). By using this method it was not possible to find any pronounced difference in the relative proportions of RNA in isolated subcellular fractions when kidneys from normal and castrated mice were compared. On the other hand there was an indication of a shift toward the bound ribosomes in livers from normal mice in comparison with livers from castrated mice. 3. Disappearance of the radioactivity followed the pattern of the first-order reaction. Comparing the half-lives of RNA in liver and kidneys it was found that in the latter in both groups of animals half-lives were shorter no matter which cellular fraction was studied. 4. The half-lives for total homogenate RNA, total ribosomal RNA and low-molecular-weight RNA from kidneys of castrated mice were approximately 20-25% longer than the half-lives for the corresponding fractions from normal mouse kidneys. 5. An explanation is put forward for the anomalous finding that RNA from the castrated-mouse kidneys has a higher specific radioactivity than that isolated from normal mice.
SUBMITTER: Avdalovic N
PROVIDER: S-EPMC1179357 | biostudies-other | 1970 Sep
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
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