The half-life of polyadenylated polysomal RNA from normal and transformed cells in monolayer culture.

Biochimica Et Biophysica Acta
T E SenskyK R Rees

Abstract

The small genotypic differences between normal and transformed cells are insufficient to account directly for all their wide phenotypic differences, which probably in some cases at least involve alterations in control of gene expression. To ascertain whether such alterations involved changes in mRNA stability, RNA half-lives were estimated in five monolayer cell lines, including two pairs of normal cells and their transformed counterparts. The results for the polyadenylated fractions in all cases fit with those expected from a model in which the whole fraction has a single half-life, of less than one generation time. From both the transformed/untransformed cell pairs, there is evidence that a relationship exists between cell generation time and the half-life of the polyadenylated polysomal RNA fraction, which persists even through the process of transformation. Considerable alteration in the pattern of RNA stability is therefore unlikely to be obligatory in in vitro transformation.

References

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