Abstract
The round nucleoli of chick embryo fibroblast cells, when exposed to adenosine (2 mM)or to a number of adenosine analogues, lose material and unravel over a period of several hours to become beaded strands, 20 mu M in length, termed nucleolar necklaces (NN). Light microscope observations on this process are described. Biochemical experiments have revealed that most of these analogues interfere with both messenger RNA synthesis and ribosome synthesis, causing extensive degradation of the preribosome species containing 32S RNA although most of the preribosomes containing 18S RNA survive. We suggest that it is the depletion from the nucleolus of the adhesive 32S and 28S RNA preribosomes which allows the remaining nucleolar apparatus to spread apart into the NN configuration. Also required for the maintenance of the NN structure is the synthesis of some ribosomal RNA (rRNA) possibly present as rRNA "feathers" on the DNA. The addition of inhibitors of rRNA synthesis such as actinomycin D to the NN-containing cells causes loss of rRNA. Then a contraction and collapse of the NN structure into small dense spheres is observed.
Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Cited by
67 articles.
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