Author:
Bard E.,ColWill R.,L'Anglais R.,Kaplan J. G.
Abstract
In order for significant DNA synthesis to be observed in the case of human lymphocytes stimulated for 36 h in presence of phytohemagglutinin (PHA), Ca2+ must be present in the medium continuously for at least 20 h; access to Ca2+ for 10-h periods during the first 30 h was not sufficient to permit DNA synthesis to occur. Addition of the chelator EGTA from 0 to 60 h after stimulation caused severe inhibition of incorporation of labelled thymidine when this was measured after 36 to 144 h of culture. Equimolar calcium reversed the inhibition caused by EGTA. Incorporation of labelled uridine and leucine showed a temporal pattern of dependence on the presence of Ca2+ in the medium similar to that of thymidine. Ca2+ appears not to be required in the medium during the last half (i.e.,20–36 h) of the presynthetic G1 phase nor during S phase since removal of Ca2+ from the medium after 20 h did not prevent a subpopulation of lymphocytes from entering S phase 16 h later.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Cited by
18 articles.
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