The measurement of the production of during erythroid differentiation of the Friend erythroleukemia cell

1987 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 188-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Schmedt ◽  
L. Kleiman

The production of [Formula: see text] during Friend cell erythroid differentiation has been studied. In vitro measurements of total nuclear RNA synthesis in nuclei isolated from Friend cells at different stages of differentiation show the total RNA synthesis increases 1.5-fold at day 1 of induction and then decreases through days 2 and 3 to approximately 75% of its rate of synthesis in the nuclei of uninduced cells. The synthesis of RNA polymerase III transcripts undergoes a similar fluctuation through day 2 of induction, but increases again at day 3. The specific synthesis of [Formula: see text] was measured by hybridization of labelled nuclear RNA to a [Formula: see text] gene probe. During erythroid differentiation the percentage of nuclear RNA represented by [Formula: see text] remains constant (0.065%), so that the absolute synthesis of [Formula: see text] fluctuates during differentiation, in parallel with the fluctuations in the synthesis of total nuclear RNA. The relative synthesis of [Formula: see text]in vivo was studied by labelling cells with 35Pi, isolating the resulting radioactive tRNA – 5S RNA population, and hybridizing this population to a [Formula: see text] gene probe. The ratio of [Formula: see text] in newly synthesized cytoplasmic RNA remains similar throughout differentiation (averaging 0.0171), implying that the fluctuations observed in the nuclear synthesis of [Formula: see text] during differentiation probably also occur for the nuclear synthesis of most tRNA and 5S RNA species. Attempts were made to measure the relative steady-state concentration of [Formula: see text] using both aminoacylation and in vitro end labelling of tRNA followed by hybridization to a [Formula: see text] gene probe. These two methods gave different results and we discuss the possible pitfalls of using enzymatic methods for quantitating tRNA concentrations in the cell.

1973 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. N. BANERJEE ◽  
M. R. BANERJEE

SUMMARY Linear sucrose density gradient analysis showed that the synthesis of rapidly-labelled high molecular weight RNA was virtually absent in the mammary glands of virgin mice. The rapidly-labelled RNA was first evident in the mammary gland in pregnancy and was also present during lactation. The bulk of this newly-made nuclear RNA sedimented as 45S and 32S fractions after a 15-min [3H]uridine pulse period in vivo. No labelled 18S RNA was detectable in the nuclear fraction after the 15-min pulse but it was present in the cytoplasm, suggesting that the 18S RNA migrates to the cytoplasm almost immediately after its formation. Thirty minutes after injection of [3H]uridine, the initial radioactivity of the 45S region migrated to the 32S fraction and a labelled 28S peak was also present in the cytoplasmic RNA at 60 min, suggesting that the processed 28S ribosomal RNA in the mammary gland began to migrate to the cytoplasm between 30 and 60 min after the nuclear synthesis of the precursor molecule.


1967 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-56
Author(s):  
MAUREEN OWEN

Young rabbits were given a single intraperitoneal injection of [3H]uridine. Using the technique of water-soluble autoradiography a study was made of the uptake of the radioactive label into soluble precursors and RNA in cells on an actively growing bone surface. Labelling of the soluble intracellular pools was immediate, but incorporation of label from these pools into RNA was not completed until 24 h after injection. At this time all the label in the sections was in RNA but this represented only 30% of the total label initially in the soluble pools. This means that 70% of the label is lost from the cell in the first 24 h either as degradation products of RNA synthesis or by other as yet unknown mechanisms. The pattern of labelling of the RNA was similar to that previously found for other mammalian cells in vivo or in vitro. There was a rapid uptake of label into nuclear RNA which reached a maximum by 2 h after injection and a slower uptake into cytoplasmic RNA which reached a maximum by 24 h after injection. There was a slow loss of label from the cells after 24 h indicating a half-life of about 8 days for this relatively stable RNA. A comparison was made of RNA synthesis in the proliferating preosteoblasts and the highly differentiated non-dividing osteoblasts. Labelling of the nuclear RNA for the two cell types was identical. The rate of labelling of the cytoplasmic RNA was similar for the two cell types but the maximum level of labelling in the cytoplasm of the osteoblasts was 2 to 3 times that in the preosteoblasts. This could be correlated with the more active protein synthesis by the osteoblasts. There was a slow loss of labelled RNA by the osteoblasts and preosteoblasts and a rapid loss by the osteocytes after the cells had been incorporated within the bone. It was suggested that this loss paralleled the decline in the rate of protein synthesis by the cells as their environment changed.


1983 ◽  
Vol 214 (3) ◽  
pp. 915-921 ◽  
Author(s):  
P S Agutter

RNA efflux from isolated nuclei can be studied either as a means of elucidating the general mechanism of nucleo-cytoplasmic RNA transport, or as part of an investigation of the processing and utilization of particular gene transcripts. The present paper describes an assessment of three methodological criticisms of RNA-efflux measurements that are made for the former reason: for such measurements, it is sufficient to show that the post-incubation supernatant RNA is similar overall to homologous cytoplasmic mRNA, rather than to nuclear RNA, that is nevertheless of intranuclear origin, and that alterations to the medium during experiments do not markedly perturb this general nuclear restriction. The results seem to justify the following conclusions. (1) Although degradation of the nuclear RNA occurs during incubation in vitro, this process does not account for the appearance of RNA in the postnuclear supernatant. The degradation can be largely prevented by the addition of serine-proteinase inhibitors without altering the RNA efflux rate. (2) Some adsorption of labelled cytoplasmic RNA to the nuclear surface occurs during both isolation and incubation of the nuclei, and some desorption occurs during incubation. However, these effects introduce errors of less than 10% into the measurements of efflux rates. (3) Exogenous acidic polymers, including polyribonucleotides, disrupt nuclei and increase the apparent RNA efflux rate by causing leakage of nuclear contents. However, this effect can largely be overcome by including the nuclear stabilizers spermidine, Ca2+ and Mn2+ in the medium. In terms of this assessment, it appears that RNA efflux from isolated nuclei in media containing nuclear stabilizers serves as a reasonable model for transport in vivo.


1969 ◽  
Vol 113 (2) ◽  
pp. 307-313 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A.-B. Badawy ◽  
Audrey E. White ◽  
G. H. Lathe

1. As early as 1hr. after the intraperitoneal administration of tannic acid to rats, it could be demonstrated in the liver. At 3hr. the nuclear fraction contained the largest amount of tannic acid. 2. Nuclear RNA synthesis was inhibited in vivo 2hr. after the administration of tannic acid. Induction by cortisol of tryptophan pyrrolase was 90% inhibited at 24hr. 3. Incorporation of [1−14C]leucine into protein by liver slices from treated rats was decreased by 50% after 24hr. Its incorporation into postmitochondrial supernatant from treated animals was not inhibited. Incorporation into slices and postmitochondrial supernatants were inhibited in vitro by tannic acid. 4. The sequence of events: concentration of tannic acid in nuclei, inhibition of nuclear RNA synthesis, inhibition of protein synthesis and production of necrosis, is discussed.


1965 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 545-550 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Di Marco ◽  
R. Silvestrini ◽  
S. Di Marco ◽  
T. Dasdia

The effect has been studied of Actinomycin D, Daunomycin (Da.), and Da. N acetyl derivative on mitotic activity and on the nucleic acid synthesis of in vitro HeLa cell cultures. The experiments were carried out by means of the radioautographic technique using stripping films. The relative uptake of thymidine-H3 and uridine-H3 was determined by means of the reduced silver grain count present in the nuclei of controls and treated cells. The mitotic activity and thymidine incorporation were noticeably reduced by Daunomycin and Actinomycin, whereas both processes appeared less affected by Da. N acetyl derivative. As regards nuclear RNA synthesis, all three antibiotics at low doses chiefly inhibit nucleolar RNA synthesis. On the other hand, whilst Actinomycin at higher doses causes an almost total inhibition of the synthesis of the whole nuclear RNA, in Daunomycin- and Da. N acetyl derivative-treated cells extranucleolar RNA synthesis is less susceptible to inhibition.


1979 ◽  
Vol 57 (6) ◽  
pp. 902-913 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick W. K. Lee ◽  
John S. Colter

Studies of the synthesis of viral ribonucleates and polypeptides in cells infected with two RNA−ts mutants of Mengo virus (ts 135 and ts 520) have shown that when ts 135 infected cells are shifted from the permissive (33 °C) to the nonpermissive (39 °C) temperature: (i) the synthesis of all three species of viral RNA (single stranded, replicative form, and replicative intermediate) is inhibited to about the same extent, and (ii) the posttranslational cleavage of structural polypeptide precursors A and B is partially blocked. Investigations of the in vivo and in vitro stability of the viral RNA replicase suggest that the RNA− phentotype reflects a temperature-sensitive defect in the enzyme. The second defect does not appear to result from the inhibition of viral RNA synthesis at 39 °C, since normal cleavage of polypeptides A and B occurs in wt Mengo-infected cells in which viral RNA synthesis is blocked by cordycepin, and at the nonpermissive temperature in ts 520 infected cells. Considered in toto, the evidence suggests that ts 135 is a double mutant.Subviral (53 S) particles have been shown to accumulate in ts 520 (but not ts 135) infected cells when cultures are shifted from 33 to 39 °C. This observation provides supporting evidence for the proposal that this recently discovered particle is an intermediate in the assembly pathway of Mengo virions.


1996 ◽  
Vol 16 (11) ◽  
pp. 6468-6476 ◽  
Author(s):  
S A Shaaban ◽  
E V Bobkova ◽  
D M Chudzik ◽  
B D Hall

We have studied the in vitro elongation and termination properties of several yeast RNA polymerase III (pol III) mutant enzymes that have altered in vivo termination behavior (S. A. Shaaban, B. M. Krupp, and B. D. Hall, Mol. Cell. Biol. 15:1467-1478, 1995). The pattern of completed-transcript release was also characterized for three of the mutant enzymes. The mutations studied occupy amino acid regions 300 to 325, 455 to 521, and 1061 to 1082 of the RET1 protein (P. James, S. Whelen, and B. D. Hall, J. Biol. Chem. 266:5616-5624, 1991), the second largest subunit of yeast RNA pol III. In general, mutant enzymes which have increased termination require a longer time to traverse a template gene than does wild-type pol III; the converse holds true for most decreased-termination mutants. One increased-termination mutant (K310T I324K) was faster and two reduced termination mutants (K512N and T455I E478K) were slower than the wild-type enzyme. In most cases, these changes in overall elongation kinetics can be accounted for by a correspondingly longer or shorter dwell time at pause sites within the SUP4 tRNA(Tyr) gene. Of the three mutants analyzed for RNA release, one (T455I) was similar to the wild type while the two others (T455I E478K and E478K) bound the completed SUP4 pre-tRNA more avidly. The results of this study support the view that termination is a multistep pathway in which several different regions of the RET1 protein are actively involved. Region 300 to 325 likely affects a step involved in RNA release, while the Rif homology region, amino acids 455 to 521, interacts with the nascent RNA 3' end. The dual effects of several mutations on both elongation kinetics and RNA release suggest that the protein motifs affected by them have multiple roles in the steps leading to transcription termination.


1993 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. 5377-5382
Author(s):  
B Datta ◽  
A M Weiner

U6 small nuclear RNA (snRNA) is the most highly conserved of the five spliceosomal snRNAs that participate in nuclear mRNA splicing. The proposal that U6 snRNA plays a key catalytic role in splicing [D. Brow and C. Guthrie, Nature (London) 337:14-15, 1989] is supported by the phylogenetic conservation of U6, the sensitivity of U6 to mutation, cross-linking of U6 to the vicinity of the 5' splice site, and genetic evidence for extensive base pairing between U2 and U6 snRNAs. We chose to mutate the phylogenetically invariant 41-ACAGAGA-47 and 53-AGC-55 sequences of human U6 because certain point mutations within the homologous regions of Saccharomyces cerevisiae U6 selectively block the first or second step of mRNA splicing. We found that both sequences are more tolerant to mutation in human cells (assayed by transient expression in vivo) than in S. cerevisiae (assayed by effects on growth or in vitro splicing). These differences may reflect different rate-limiting steps in the particular assays used or differential reliance on redundant RNA-RNA or RNA-protein interactions. The ability of mutations in U6 nucleotides A-45 and A-53 to selectively block step 2 of splicing in S. cerevisiae had previously been construed as evidence that these residues might participate directly in the second chemical step of splicing; an indirect, structural role seems more likely because the equivalent mutations have no obvious phenotype in the human transient expression assay.


Blood ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 63 (6) ◽  
pp. 1376-1384 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Yokochi ◽  
M Brice ◽  
PS Rabinovitch ◽  
T Papayannopoulou ◽  
G Stamatoyannopoulos

Two new cell surface antigens specific for the erythroid lineage were defined with cytotoxic IgM monoclonal antibodies (McAb) (EP-1; EP-2) that were produced using BFU-E-derived colonies as immunogens. These two antigens are expressed on in vivo and in vitro derived adult and fetal erythroblasts, but not on erythrocytes. They are not detectable on resting lymphocytes, concanavalin-A (Con-A) activated lymphoblasts, granulocytes, and monocytes or granulocytic cells or macrophages present in peripheral blood or harvested from CFU-GM cultures. Cell line and tissue distributions distinguish McAb EP-1 and EP-2 from all previously described monoclonal antibodies. McAb EP-1 (for erythropoietic antigen-1) inhibits the formation of BFU-E and CFU-E, but not CFU-GM, colonies in complement-dependent cytotoxicity assays. By cell sorting analysis, about 90% of erythroid progenitors (CFU-E, BFU-E) were recovered in the antigen-positive fraction. Seven percent of the cells in this fraction were progenitors (versus 0.1% in the negative fraction). The expression of EP-1 antigen is greatly enhanced in K562 cells, using inducers of hemoglobin synthesis. McAb EP-2 fails to inhibit BFU-E and CFU-E colony formation in complement-dependent cytotoxicity assays. EP-2 antigen is predominantly expressed on in vitro derived immature erythroblasts, and it is weakly expressed on mature erythroblasts. The findings with McAb EP-1 provide evidence that erythroid progenitors (BFU-E and CFU-E) express determinants that fail to be expressed on other progenitor cells and hence appear to be unique to the erythroid lineage. McAb EP-1 and EP-2 are potentially useful for studies of erythroid differentiation and progenitor cell isolation.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 14-15
Author(s):  
Sara El Hoss ◽  
Sylvie Cochet ◽  
Auria Godard ◽  
Hongxia Yan ◽  
Michaël Dussiot ◽  
...  

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is an autosomal hereditary recessive disorder caused by a point mutation in the β globin gene resulting in a Glu-to-Val substitution at the 6th position of the β globin protein. The resulting abnormal hemoglobin (HbS) polymerizes under hypoxic conditions driving red blood cell (RBC) sickling (Pauling et al., 1949). While pathobiology of circulating RBCs has been extensively analyzed in SCD, erythropoiesis is surprisingly poorly documented. In β-thalassemia, ineffective erythropoiesis is characterized by high levels of apoptotic erythroblasts during the late stages of terminal differentiation, due to an accumulation of free β-globin chains (Arlet et al., 2016). Ineffective erythropoiesis is the major cause of anemia in β-thalassemia patients. In contrast, a marked decrease in life span of circulating red cells, a feature of sickle red cells, is considered to be the major determinant of chronic anemia in SCD. It is generally surmised that ineffective erythropoiesis contributes little to anemia. The bone marrow environment has been well documented to be hypoxic (0.1 to 6% O2) (Mantel et al., 2015). As hypoxia induces HbS polymerization, we hypothesized that cell death may occur in vivo because of HbS polymer formation in the late stages of differentiation characterized by high intracellular hemoglobin concentration. In the present study, using both in vitro and in vivo derived human erythroblasts we assessed the extent of ineffective erythropoiesis in SCD. We explored the mechanistic basis of the ineffective erythropoiesis in SCD using biochemical, cellular and imaging techniques. In vitro erythroid differentiation using CD34+ cells isolated from SCD patients and from healthy donors was performed. A 2-phase erythroid differentiation protocol was used and cultures were performed at two different oxygen conditions, i.e. normoxia and partial hypoxia (5% O2). We found that hypoxia induces cell death of sickle erythroblasts starting at the polychromatic stage, positively selecting cells with high levels of fetal hemoglobin (HbF). This inference was supported by flow cytometry data showing higher percentages of dead cells within the non-F-cell population as compared to the F-cell population for SCD cells. Moreover, SCD dead cells showed higher levels of chaperon protein HSP70 in the cytoplasm than live cells, while no difference was detected between both subpopulations for control cells, suggesting that cell death of SCD erythroblasts was probably due to HSP70 cytoplasmic sequestration. This was supported by western-blot experiments showing less HSP70 in the nucleus of SCD erythroblasts under hypoxia, associated with decreased levels of GATA-1. At the molecular level, HSP70 was co-immunoprecipitated with HbS under hypoxia indicating that both proteins were in the same complex and suggesting interaction between HSP70 and HbS polymers in the cyotplasm. Importantly, we confirm these results in vivo by showing that in bone marrow of SCD patients (n = 5) cell loss occurs during terminal erythroid differentiation, with a significant drop in the cell count between the polychromatic and the orthochromatic stages (Figure 1). In order to specifically address the role of HbF in cell survival, we used a CRISPR-Cas9 approach to mimic the effect of hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin (HPFH). CD34+ cells were transfected either with a gRNA targeting the LRF binding site (-197) or a gRNA targeting an unrelated locus (AAVS1) (Weber, Frati, et al. 2020). As expected, the disruption of the LRF binding site resulted in HbF induction as shown by higher %F-cells compared to AAVS1 control. These higher levels of F-cells resulted in decreased apoptosis, under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions, clearly demonstrating the positive and selective effect of HbF on SCD cell survival (Figure 2). In summary, our study shows that HbF has a dual beneficial effect in SCD by conferring a preferential survival of F-cells in the circulation and by decreasing ineffective erythropoiesis. These findings thus bring new insights into the role of HbF in modulating clinical severity of anemia in SCD by both regulating red cell production and red cell destruction. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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