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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Incorporation of tritiated uridine into DNA of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells.

Ehrlich ascites tumor cells were labeled with [5,6-3H]uridine in vivo during the exponential growth phase of the tumor in the mouse. Hydroxyapatite column chromatography of the total cell nucleic acid revealed a level of activity in the DNA approaching 50% of the incorporated activity of the RNA after 24 hours. After perchloric acid hydrolysis, the constituent bases of the DNA, separated by paper chromatography, contained more than 90% of the tritium radioactivity in the cytosine and thymine, at a ratio of approximately 2:1. Prior to digestion of the polymer, the level of label in the DNA was not sensitive to RNase, alkaline, or heat denaturation. Equilibrium density gradient centrifugation produced a single peak, coincidental for radioactivity and optical density at 260 nm. Our results indicate that tumor cells under replicative stress incorporated more than one-third of the tritium radioactivity of uridine into the DNA, whereas those at a growth plateau had less than 10% of the label in the DNA. This exogenous uridine radioactivity observed in the DNA represented neither a DNA-RNA hybrid, RNA primer pieces in DNA synthesis, nor any other RNase-sensitive species, but was apparently the consequence of amination and methylation of the tritium-labeled uracil moiety to satisfy the metabolic needs of the replicating cells for cytosine and thymine bases.[1]

References

  1. Incorporation of tritiated uridine into DNA of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells. Yost, B.K., Rosenberg, M.J., Nishioka, D.J. J. Natl. Cancer Inst. (1976) [Pubmed]
 
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