The Journal of General Physiology
Cell MicroControls
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The Journal of General Physiology, Vol 55, 688-702, Copyright © 1970 by The Rockefeller University Press


ARTICLE

Amphibian Lens Histones and Their Relation to the Cell Cycle

Alan Johnson 1 and Howard Rothstein 1

1 From the Department of Zoology, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont 05401.

Dr. Johnson's present address is The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute at Houston, Department of Biochemistry, Houston, Texas 77025.

Histones have been electrophoretically separated from acid extracts of the frog lens for the first time. The five conventional histone fractions, representing four electrophoretic bands (f1; f2b, f3; f2a2; and f2a1), are present in both the epithelial and fiber cells. In addition, a fifth fraction was isolated from both sources and the evidence suggests that it may be a tissue-specific histone, possibly related to the lysine-rich f2c fraction found previously only in nucleated erythrocytes. The epithelial cells contain a substantially greater amount of histone than the fiber cells. Moreover, the fibers, unlike the epithelium, manifest no net histone synthesis or turnover following lenticular explantation. Microspectrophotometric, radioautographic, and gel electrophoretic studies indicate that the histones are synthesized in frog lenses concurrently with DNA. Inhibition of DNA synthesis does not completely abolish that of histones but reduces it by about one-half. In the early stages of culture (prior to their synthesis and that of DNA) the histones appear to undergo alterations which are prevented by treatment with cycloheximide.

Submitted on September 19, 1969


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